AM Gold 2025

Trying to sum up a year’s worth of listening is never easy. I thought I’d get ahead of the curve in 2025 and do a better job of tracking every album that stood out to me throughout the year, but instead of making the job of list-making easier, all that did was give me even more choices than usual.

Which means this year’s AM Gold is even longer than usual—200+ albums, all told—and I’ve gone back to the unranked list because last year’s task of deciding on an order was honestly a nightmare even with 100 albums. Instead, I’ve grouped it into 50 favourites, and 150+ others that are still very much worth a listen.

Bandcamp links are included wherever possible, which is the vast majority of them. I’ve also thrown a track from each album into playlists on Apple Music and Spotify. Throw ’em on shuffle and you’re sure to discover at least a few new favourites.

50 favourites: The AM’s best of 2025

Adrian Younge – Something about April III
Younge’s stunning psych-soul series takes a welcome detour to Brazil.

Alabaster DePlume – A Blade Because A Blade Is Whole
Earnest, soul-searching, ambient-leaning jazz & spoken word.

Anika – Abyss
Stripped-down, grunge-influenced art rock from the former Exploded View singer.

🇨🇦 Avi C. Engel – Mote
Drone-folk, rich and loamy, and my introduction to the haunting tone of the gudok.

Ben Morales Frost, Violetta Vicci – Forest Music EP
Downtempo neo-classical (piano, keyboards, and strings) suited for escaping into imaginary woodlands.

Bertrand Belin – Watt
Belin’s gravelly voice often reminds me of Bryan Ferry’s later work (Avonmore especially), and the music backing him isn’t worlds removed from Roxy either, but the Franco-pop underpinnings give this its own swooning sense of romance.

Black Market Karma – Mellowmaker
Big-beat psychedelia, evoking ’90s Dust Brothers productions as much as the genre’s ’60s heydey with its sing-song melodies, loping rhythms, and looping structures.

Black Taffy – Out Moon
Simple instrumental beats with lush, cinematic production. Heavy on atmosphere and more than willing to tug on the heartstrings.

Blue Lake – The Animal
A wondrous expansion of Blue Lake’s folk-kosmische sound, blending pastoral beauty and ambient folk with some of the playfulness of Pengion Cafe. Organic and unpredictable, whirling and wandering like a wayward breeze.

Brown Fang – Netherfield Lagoons
Autumnal soundscapes, pitched somewhere between the Hardy Tree and Durutti Column.

🇨🇦 Buildings and Food – Provincial Park
Ambient compositions inspired by Canadian landscapes. Not so much about buildings, then, but still nourishing. Don’t miss the excellent remix EP, too.

Cerys Hafana – Angel
A remarkable album from Welsh triple-harpist Cerys Hafana. A beautiful fusion of folk & traditional tunes with neo-classical minimalism.The songs are dynamic, living things, deeply affecting with & without Hafana’s haunting voice.

Essendon Airport – MOR
Charming minimal compositions from a reunited ’70s/’80s Aussie duo; breezy & whimsical with an air of melancholy. Slide guitar, wurlitzer, gently chugging drum machines—everything you need to float through the daily drudgery.

Felbm – winterspring/summerfall
Splitting each season into 6 songs, this 24-track concept album is a pastoral jazz triumph, and a gorgeous blend of Felbm’s interests in natural & musical cycles.

🇨🇦 Fortunato Durutti Marinetti – Bitter Sweet, Sweet Bitter
Marinetti (aka Daniel Colussi) has been planting a flag alongside esoteric Canadian songwriters like Sandro Perri, Dan Bejar, and Leonard Cohen. Storied company, but the vivid arrangements, elliptical lyrics and offbeat delivery make a compelling case.

🇨🇦 Foxwarren – 2
Shauf’s side-project gives him the opportunity for a modest reinvention, sampling and remixing his band’s contributions into wooze indie-pop delights.

Go Kurosawa – Soft Shakes
The former Kikagaku Moyo drummer/ GuruGuruBrain co-founder tackles all the instrumentaiton and production on this one. Gentler and more eclectic than KM, and more rewarding for it, especially on the Kraftwerk-ish “Autowalk.”

Gustaf Ljunggren, Emil de Waal – Mikroklima
A melodic, meandering, and marvelous set of jazz-influenced instrumentals grounded in warm, rustic tones.

Ichiko Aoba – Luminescent Creatures
It’s rare for an album to feel this gentle and this unpredictable at the same time. Chamber folk and dream pop, intricate and delicate in equal measure.

Immersion, Suss Nanocluster, Vol. 3
The gentler of Immersion’s two 2025 albums (both are excellent, but I slightly preferred this one). Suss adds ambient Americana to Immersion’s kosmische strains, the collaboration bringing out the best in both.

🇨🇦 Jairus Sharif – Basis of Unity
Questing and inquisitive spiritual jazz—genuinely spiritual, not just a genre affectation, but a real search for meaning through breath, melody, and sonic texture.

Jilk – Fix Your Heart
The closest thing to pop structures I’ve heard from Jilk, without compromising on the experimentation and musical restlessness that makes the whole project so appealing. A truly gorgeous blend of melancholy French pop, skittering beats, and ambient electronics, easily one of the year’s best releases.

🇨🇦 Laurie Torres – Après coup
Confident and tranquil ambient jazz that rarely rises above a whisper, and is all the more engrossing for it.

Loaded Honey – Love Made Trees
Channeling vintage AM-radio soul: Warm, crackling, with the occasional surprising production choice breaking it out of a nostaglic haze.

M. Sage – Tender / Wading
The audio equivalent of laying down in a bed of leaves warm and soft from the midday sun, rich scent of humus filling your lungs, comforting and consciousness-dissolving in a way I can’t quite articulate.

Magic Fig – Valerian Tea
Starts with Starcastle prog-pop arpeggios, moves through an assortment of Canterbury-adjascent soundscapes, all in all a delightfully trippy slice of warm psychedelia.

🇨🇦 Memory Pearl – Cosmic-Astral
Apparently a re-imagining of a 1970s LSD soundtrack through a nurturing new-age lens; some pronounced jazz and easy listening influences, but still a trip in its own right.

Mess Esque Jay Marie, Comfort Me
Dirty Three guitarist Mick Turner’s latest project is comfortingly off-kilter, preferring to paint around melodies and hint at structures without ever taking the obvious route.

🇨🇦 Moon Apple – Four Pillars
The Montreal musician’s first full-length in five years offers “ritualistic rhythms and tribal soundscapes for a modern era,” an electronic ode to & subversion of traditian & ritual.

Mulatu Astatke Mulatu Plays Mulatu
Astatke helped define Ethio-jazz more than half a century ago and yet this is the first of his albums I’ve heard start to finish. Truly my loss—this is warm, rhythmic, complex, and captivating. Better late than never.

🇨🇦 No Joy – Bugland
Omnivorous shoegaze, with bold production that leaves no sound left unturned. No Joy’s inspirations run from Deftones to Enya, finding no contradiction in all the disparate sources.

🇨🇦 Orbital Ensemble – Live at Gold Standard
This live album and the self-titled debut from the Toronto latin jazz/psych ensemble are both full of groovy magic, but the slightly more muscular sound gives Live at Gold Standard the edge.

Oruã & Reverse Death – Reflectors Vol. 1
A split cassette featuring Reverse Death’s first music since their 2022 debut and demos from Oruã’s Slacker (also excellent). RD’s tracks are blissful slow-flowing psych; Oruã rougher-edged and garage-y, both glorious.

🇨🇦 Patche – Mode
Not sure what to call this outside of invigorating. It reminds me of hearing Holy Fuck’s live electronics for the first time, that mix of energy and possibility. Krautrock, maybe, but aimed at the dance floor, party music refracted into abstraction.

Persica 3 – Beauty in the Noise
Cindy Lee + C86 = jangle-pop bliss. Seems simple enough, but the quality of the songwriting goes well beyond any formula.

Phi-Psonics – Expanding to One
Consciousness-expanding spiritual jazz journeys. Three separate Wurlitzers are credited, which says everything you need to know.

Piotr Kurek – Songs and Bodies
Should be instantly adopted into the space rock/post-rock canon. Floyd at their most cosmic with vocals courtesy of a garbled voicemail—and I mean that as the highest compliment.

Pneumatic Tubes – Runner’s High
A fine follow-up to 2022’s A Letter from TreeTops, bringing together kosmische synths, warm woodwinds, and new age bliss.

Polypores – Cosmically a Shambles
December’s Hungry Vortex is a bit more brash, but Cosmically a Shambles was my favourite of 2025’s Polypores releases, a masterful analog workout, clattering, whirling, and playful.

🇨🇦 Population II – Maintenant Jamais
The evolution of this Montreal trio from their initial space rock odysseys to the concise but still ambitious psych-prog of Maintenant Jamais still blows me away.

Rachel Kitchlew – Flirty Ghost
A must-listen for fans of Dorothy Ashby and the more groove-based, less celestial side of jazz harp. Elegant stuff that manages to stay on just the right side of easy listening.

Rival Consoles – Landscape from Memory
I’m never sure how to describe the Erased Tapes aesthetic, but Rival Consoles must be its apex; synthetic but deeply affecting, overwhelming in the best sort of way.

Rural Tapes – Oneiric
“Flower Labs” is pure Clay Pipe, bursting with pastoral bliss, but Oneiric roams wider grounds—”Fantasia” with its swooning vocoder, “Hypermnesia” evoking early 2000s post rock, “Lingering Souls” pure paisley pop, just wonderful.

Sanam – Sametou Sawtan
Unexpected and unpredictable, dream pop in its more jagged original form filtered through Arabic musical traditions and a drive to create new sounds. If it’s ok to call this rock then it’s one of the more vital rock records of 2025.

Sessa – Pequena Vertigem de Amor
An evolution of the impeccably arranged MPB on 2022’s Estrela Acesa, laid back grooves and unafraid of a good hook. Fans of Arthur Verocai take note.

Sewell and the Gong – Patron Saint of Elsewhere
I’m such a sucker for pastoral British electronics. Pure contentment, and followed up by a solid remix EP.

Shrunken Elvis – Shrunken Elvis
A collaboration between Spencer Cullum, Sean Thompson, and Rich Ruth that doesn’t sound much like any of them, instead drawing from krautrock and ambient jazz for something fresh and open, with an easy, unflashy virtuosity.

🇨🇦 T Gowdy – Trill Scan
Prog-influenced electronics that draw surprising connections between medieval European music, contemporary electronic sounds, and artful experimentation.

🇨🇦 Thanya Iyer – Tide/Tied
Iyer’s jazz-and-soul-inflected pop is a warm breeze: nourishing and refreshing but also a force of nature. Healing sounds for a broken age.

🇨🇦 Viviane Audet – Le piano et le torrent
Solo piano compositions, quiet and unadorned. Songs like Barlicoco evoke Satie (at least to my untrained ear), and that strain of haunting minimalism is always welcome.


Another 150 or so albums you really can’t go wrong with, especially if you’re into the general genre

Apologies for the lack of blurbs/notes on many of these, but (and I insist this is true) there is simply too much good music out there, and more keeps getting made every year. The writing may be half-baked, but the music certainly isn’t.

Aaron Fisher and Rob Stephenson – Actual Place (Ambient folk)

Action & Tension & Space – New Dimensions (Kosmische)
Spaced-out Norwegian instrumentals with strains of psych, post-rock & jazz

Akasha System – Heliocene (Electronic)
A blend of Balearic beats, breathy synths and cosmic-minded new age atmosphere; too propulsive to really be called ambient, but definitely aimed at the chillout room more than the dancefloor.

Alex Albrecht – The Arboretum (Electronic)

🇨🇦 Alex Stevens and Ethan Levy – Two Silent Passengers (Instrumental folk)

🇨🇦 Altus – Terraform (Electronic)

Ami Taf Ra – The Prophet and the Madman (Soul, art-pop)
Maximalist jazz-prog, high-concept, played without a whiff of restraint but who needs it.

Andy Bell – Pinball Wanderer (Psychedelic)

Andy Boay – You Took That Walk For The Two Of Us (Psychedelic)
Solo offshoot of the always-brilliant Tonstartssbandht

Applesauce Tears – Balcony Confidential (Dream pop)

Apta – The Pool (Electronic)
Playful, soul-soothing modular synthesis.

Astrobal – L’uomo e la natura (Psychedelic)
Modern multicultural lounge-pop, for fans of Stereolab’s kitschier side

Automatic – Is It Now? (Art-rock)
Deceptively catchy synth-driven post-punk. At times sounds like a less haunted Broadcast, thanks to the band’s ear for distorted sonic textures and hypnotic melodies, but the killer basslines and off-kilter hooks are all their own.

Babe Rainbow – Slipper Imp and Shakaerator (Psychedelic)
Effortless bubblegum psych-pop—all mild highs and sunny days

🇨🇦 Badge Epoch – Furry Worried Ape (Groove)
Solo-leaning effort from Badge Epoque Enemble’s Max Turnbull (hence the slightly different name, but thankfully very much in the same vein)

Barker – Stochastic Drift (Electronic)
Experimental electronics inspired by the chaos and randomness of the universe

Basic – Dream City EP (Art-rock)
A bit like if Durutti Column listened to more Kraftwerk but also wanted to embrace more groove

🇨🇦 Beat Sexü – Dernière Chance (Electronic)

🇨🇦 Bells Larsen – Blurring Time (Indie folk)
An indie-folk album recorded both pre- and post-transition, allowing Larsen to harmonize their past voice with their present.

Ben Lamar Gay – Yowzers (Jazz)
The title track is the apocalyptic climate change anthem I didn’t know we needed.

Bitchin Bajas – Inland See (Ambient)
Four songs, 40 minutes, and every bit as immersive as you’d hope from these BBs. A wonderfully confident album, willing to let each track unfurl, patient and unforced.

Black Milk & Fat Ray – Food from the Gods (Hip hop)

Brown Spirits – Cosmic Seeds (Kosmische)

Bryan Ferry – Loose Talk (Art pop)
Spoken-word poetry over remixed Roxy demos; surprising and mysterious

C.R. Gillespie – Island of Women (Ambient)
Warm & balmy ambient sounds, gently percussive & consistently inventive.

Cate Francesca Brooks – Lofoten (Ambient / Electronic)

Charif Megarbane – Hawalat (Psychedelic / Library groove)

Charles Webster & the South African Connection – From the Hill (Electronic / Deep house)

Chloé Antoniotti – Bouquet II EP (Ambient / Neo-classical)

🇨🇦 Cris Derksen – The Visit (Neo-classical, Indigenous)

Cristina Lord – If It All Falls (Electronic)
“Genre-fluid electroacoustic works that explores concepts of texture and identity,” per Bandcamp. Headphone candy for those of us who revel in clicks and buzzes, in other words, but also unafraid of pure melody.

Dalham – Cobra / And The Sun (Electronic)
Speculative sci-fi soundscapes that have caught the ear of Ridley Scott.

Damon Locks – List of Demands (Jazz)

Dania – Listless (Electronic / Trip Hop)
A fusion of dream pop and trip hop, with a darkness rich as black velvet. Vocals echo and dissolve, the lyrics often indiscernable or oblique, the meaning coming through in sonic textures evoking 3am streetscapes and starless nights.

🇨🇦 Daphne’s Demise – The Heart is a Garden (Psychedelic)
Cosmic Canadiana with a pleasant lofi jangle.

Deradoorian – Ready for Heaven (Psychedelic)
Pop-infused psychedelia bringing together the best elements of Deradoorian’s various musical personae.

Derya Yıldırım & Grup Şimşek – Yarın Yoksa (Psychedelic)
“Outernational” psych-pop & Anatollian folk songs

🇨🇦 Destroyer – Dan’s Boogie (Art-rock)
As evocative as you’d hope, another fine extension of the Destroyer mythos

Diablo in Alpujarras – Diablo in Alpujarras (Psychedelic)
Guitar-forward psych, groovier than the constellation over at El Paraiso but just as dedicated to the expressive potential of extended jams. Inspired by mountain hikes, and as soaring as that implies.

Dirty Projectors – Song of the Earth (Art pop, Neo-classical)
A little overstuffed and overambitious, but gorgeous nonetheless

Disiniblud – Disiniblud (Dream pop / Experimental)
Rachika Nayar, Nina Keith, and a range of collaborators creating glitchy, fractured pop soundscapes.

Dissolve in Sepia – And Also (Ambient)
Moody but optimistic ambient out of Brazil

🇨🇦 drummachinemike – I Hope This Never Finds You (Electronic)
Dark, minimal, but oddly reassuring. Has grown on me significantly with each listen.

Edena Gardens – Dispossessed (Psychedelic)
More sprawling psych jams from the good folks at El Paraiso Records.

🇨🇦 Eiyn Sof – Empyrean Death Rites (Psychedelic)
Mystical & mythical psychedelic folk

🇨🇦 Elyot – Small Dances (Experimental)

Fabiano do Nascimento – Cavejaz (Jazz)

Falls – nothing but the best for everyone (Electronic / Electroacoustic)
A four-track EP that doesn’t even hit the 10-minute mark, but still manages to be everything I want in a hit of folktronica. A bit like Bibio before Ambivalence Avenue, tape warped, beautifully played & atmospheric.

Flur – Plunge (Jazz)
Harp jazz is having a moment right now (see also: Rachel Kitchlew, Brandee Younger, a plethora of Dorothy Ashby reissues). Flur mostly land on the more spiritual/abstract side of the genre; the GoGo Penguin-ish “Bolete” being a pleasant exception.

🇨🇦 Full Moon Bummer – First Night of Summer (Indie Rock)
A new alias from Chad VanGaalen, for a more off-the-cuff creative outlet

Futuropaco – Fortezza Di Vetro Vol. II (Psychedelic)
Fuzzy & beat-driven psych-funk instrumentals

Fuubutsushi – Columbia Deluxe (Ambient / Jazz)

Golden Brown – Patterner (Cosmic American Music)

Greg Foat – 6 Days in Leysin (Jazz)

Gwenifer Raymond – Last Night I Heard The Dog Star Bark (Folk)
The British folk-horror version of Fahey’s American primitivism. A track title nodding to Jack Parsons hints at the occult atmosphere Raymond creates with tangled knots of melody & plenty of buzz.

Gwenno – Utopia (Pop)

Heal Mura – The Limited Repetition of Pleasure (Electronic)

🇨🇦 Hélène Barbier – Panorama (Indie rock)

🇨🇦 Hermitess – Death and the Fool (Psychedelic)
Heady, thoughtful freak-folk bursting with vitality. Love that cover, too.

Hilary Woods – Night CRIÚ (Dream pop)
Folk noir that fits perfectly with the Sacred Bones roster. Rarely rising above a whisper, Woods has perfected the sort of hushed that inspires you to lean in, an album witnessed through a keyhole or across a vast empty hall.

Hollie Kenniff – For Forever – The Reworks (Ambient)
Inspired ambient reworkings of an already lovely late-2024 release

Ian Boddy, Harold Grosskopf – Doppelgänger (Electronic)
Tangerine daydreams expanding the possibilities of kosmische

IE – Reverse Earth (Psychedelic)

Immersion – WTF?? (Kosmische)
Never quite matches their collaboration with SUSS from February, but by trading that album’s ambient-folk trappings for motorik jams and semi-spoken vocals, it’s easily the more instantly accessible of the two releases.

Ivan the Tolerable & Hawksmoor – Atoms in the Void (Psychedelic)
Haunted jazz, ASMR, cosmic jazz—trippy in all the right ways.

JB Dunckel, Jonathan Fitoussi – Mirages 2 (Electronic)
Mostly meditative, with some appropriately Air-y grooves along the way

Jeff Greinke – Late Rain (Experimental)
Textured & atmospheric electroacoustic compositions

Jefre Cantu-Ledesma – Gift Songs (Ambient)
Compositions so gentle they nearly don’t exist

Jelena Ćirić, Snorri Hallgrímsson, Cécile Lacharme and Oliver Patrice Weder – Tramuntana Tapes I (Art pop)
Patiently improvised dream-pop digressions

Jenny Hval – Iris Silver Mist (Art pop)
Experimental pop’s finest lyricist, in one of her more musically adventurous moods.

Jeremiah Chiu & Marta Sofia Honer – Different Rooms (Ambient / Jazz)

🇨🇦 Jonathan Personne – Nouveau Monde (Psych-pop)
Lighter/poppier psych-rock from the Corridor singer/guitarist

🇨🇦 Joni Void – Every Life is a Light (Electronic)
Given the subject matter, Void’s pedigree, and Constellation’s general vibe, this is urprisingly welcoming, but unsurprisingly idiosyncratic

🇨🇦 Joseph Shabason, Thom Gil – Mississippi River Styx (Indie / Ambient)

Juana Molina – Doga (Indie rock)

Junk Drawer – Days of Heaven (Psychedelic)

🇨🇦 Kara-Lis Coverdale – A Series of Actions in a Sphere Forever (Experimental)
Her second of three albums of 2025 is a collection of piano nocturns for the darkest hours. Elegant use of sustain and decay, notes and chords overlap, ripple, and evaporate in patient combinations.

🇨🇦 Khotin – Peace Portal (Electronic)
Glistening downtempo compositions from one of Canada’s finest producers

Kibrom Birhane – Lisané Bahir (Jazz / Experimental)

🇨🇦 King Khan and Wolf Clan Jo – Wolf Clan Jo & King Khan (Psychedelic)
Sitar-and-flute-based spiritual protest songs.

🇨🇦 Kogane, Thomas White – tomkog (Electronic)
Vibrant, bouncy, off-kilter electronic instrumentals.

Korb – Korb IV (Psychedelic)
Soundtracky psych that’s willing to get wonky, but never loses sight of the groove.

Kronstad 23 – Sommermørket (Psychedelic)

Lael Neale – Altogether Stranger (Indie rock)
Nobody else today is this good at taking rock’n’roll into the mystic.

Lake Ruth – Hawking Radiation (Dream pop)

Le Motel – Odd Numbers / Số Lẻ (Ambient)

Light-Space Modulator – The Rising Wave (Psych-pop)

Limiñanas – Faded (Psych / Dirty French Pop)

Lord of the Isles – Signals Aligned (Ambient)
I miss the poetry from 2023’s My Noise is Nothing, but the textures on this one are pure ear candy for those who like their synths hazy and distorted. “United Wire” is its best moment and mission statement; start there.

Lorelle Meets the Obsolete – Corporal (Psychedelic)
Cavernous drums, walls of feedback, towering synths, thick to the point of oppression, the production on LMtO’s latest is massive. That heft insists on your attention, a counter to the weightless algorithmic cloud.

Loula Yorke – Hydrology (Ambient)

🇨🇦 Made-Up – World Making (Art-pop)

Makaya McCraven – Off the Record (Jazz)
Four EPs recorded at different times with different lineups. PopUp Shop is the most immediately appealing to me, Techno Logic the most intriguing. Only a few songs each, but still too much to absorb in an easy sitting.

Mansur Brown – Rihla (Dream pop)
The AR Kane school of dream pop—at turns silky, noisy, hushed & grand. Rainy city streets & existential angst.

Marshall Allen – New Dawn (Jazz)
The Arkestra leader makes his solo debut at 100. Wise, radiant, masterful

Mary Sue and the Clementi Sound Appreciation Club – Porcelain Shield, Paper Sword (Jazz)

Matt McBane – Buoy (Ambient)
A buoyant balance of synthesis and strings

Mattias Uneback – Harry Garth Jones Presents Music for Love (Exotica)
Effortless pop exotica conjuring tropical expanses and easy living.

🇨🇦 Men I Trust – Equus Caballas (Indie pop)
Their second album of the year, dreamier than the first and every bit as accomplished.

Milkweed – Remscéla (Folk)
If this is folk (and they say it is), it’s one of the most unique spins on the genre you’re likely to find this year.

🇨🇦 Moat Bells – Nap Bud (Ambient)
Inspired by animal naps, Moat Bells’ latest is a bit of a snooze, but in a pleasant way. Grounding, restful, and always imaginative.

Modern Nature – The Heat Warps (Indie rock)
After a few albums seeing how diffuse their sound could get (to brilliant effect), this probably counts as forceful?

Monde UFO – Flamingo Tower (Psychedelic)
More polished than 2023’s Vandalized Statues, but still like a fractured art-pop radio transmisssion

Morgan Szymanski / Tommy Perman – Songs for the Mist Forest (Jazz)

🇨🇦 Mount Maxwell – Birds of Paradise (Ambient)

Nyron Higor – Nyron Higor (MPB / Brazilian pop)

Okonski – Entrance Music (Jazz)

Oneohtrixpointnever – Tranquilizer (Electronic)

Oono Yuuki Band – Mawari – michi, Kaze no (Post Rock)

🇨🇦 Ora Cogan – Bury Me EP (Psychedelic)

Organic Pulse Ensemble – Oppression is Nine Tenths of the Law (Jazz)
Worth it for the title alone. Fortunately the one-man spiritual jazz band is also soul-affirming.

🇨🇦 Pacific Coliseum – Voice Wave (Electronic)
Balearic/deep house from the always excellent Teen Daze

Papir – IX (Psychedelic)

Park Jiha – All Living Things (Ambient)

Patricia Brennan – Of The Near And Far (Jazz)
Jazz improvisation, new music inventiveness, neo-classical melodicism, embracing dissonance & discord but just short of outright chaos. There’s always a through-line, an inner symmetry to keep from falling apart.

🇨🇦 Peace Flag Ensemble – Everything is Possible (Jazz)
Ambient prairie jazz & post-rock for fans of Fuubutsushi

Pedro Mizutani & Skinshape – Mostrando os Dentes (Psychedelic, MPB)

Peel Dream Magazine – Taurus (Indie-pop)
Opener “Venus in Nadir” is spot-on Belle and Sebastian, but while those twee influences persist, so does the dronier indie-pop that endeared PDM in the first place. Immaculate melodies played with appealing restraing.

🇨🇦 Postnamers – City Songs (Art-pop)
Post-goth cut & paste compositions. Often discordant and unsettling, but also strangely captivating—and at times hauntingly beautiful.

Prepared – Module (Neo-classical))

Project Gemini & Wendy Martinez – Time Stands Still / Le temps s’arrête (Psychedelic)
PG always sounds like the score to an excellent forgotten film; Martinez (of Gloria) brings a different melodic sensibility, a bit like a gentler, folkier Limiñanas. Groovy Franco-psych.

🇨🇦 Proxima Psychoacoustics – Whynott (Ambient)
Nature-inspired Canadian electronics: Proxima’s most varied album to date draws from a youth spent in rural Nova Scotia, evoking the wonder of forest walks and bike rides under endless skies.

Ray Barbee – Little Postcards From Home (Kosmische)
A more mellow set from Barbee, but his albums are so sporadic I’ll take whatever I can get.

Resonating With Life – Resonating With Life (Electronic)
Space synths turned inwards, meditation aimed not at quieting the mind but opening it to the breadth of existence. That’s a lot to put on an instrumental synth album, but its optimism is very welcome right now.

Salami Rose Joe Louis – Lorings (Art-pop)
More grounded than you might expect from such a proud pop-art weirdo—but still one of the oddest pop releases of the year

Sam Prekop – Open Close (Electronic)
When it comes to modular synth, Prekop is one of the finest, and Open Close is up there with his best. Just the right balance of patience and payoff, endlessly evolving variations aiming for transcendence.

Sankt Otten – Tote Winkel (Kosmische)

Satomimagae – Taba (Folktronic)

Scholars of the Peak – Transmissions from Mother Hill (Electronic)

Sharp Pins – Balloon Balloon Balloon (Jangle pop)

SHOLTO – The Sirens (Psych / Library Groove)

Simon Pyke – Aurelume (Experimental)

Snails – Just Look Around (Indie rock)

Snakeskin – We live in sand (Dream pop)
The 2nd Beirut-based act to catch my ear this year after SANAM. Snakeskin is similarly experimental in its textures, though often brighter & more indebted to dream pop. Not all sunshine, but even at its darkest, hope remains.

Sounds of New Soma – The Story of Sam Buckett (Kosmische)

Stereolab – Instant Holograms on Metal Film (Art-pop)
Plenty of others have taken inspiration, but no one else does it quite like them.

Steve Hauschildt – Aeropsia (Electronic)
Six years and one transcontinental migration since his last release, Hauschildt’s latest picks up right where 2019’s Nonlin left off, maybe a little hazier and more ambiguous, but as rich & rewarding as anything he’s released.

Sulk Rooms – Rewilding (Electronic)

Sven Wunder – Daybreak (Easy listening)
Somewhere between library groove and easy listening (not that those poles are particularly far apart). Too sophisticated to be written off as schmaltz, but let’s say it’s at least conversant. Cinematic, openhearted, and uncynical.

🇨🇦 Teen Daze – Splashes of Colour (Electronic)

🇨🇦 Test Card – Signals (Electronic)

The Baker Fields – Frankley My Dear (Electronic)
Another dose of pastoral bliss from the label that does it best.

The Circling Sun – Orbits (Jazz)

The Cords – The Cords (Jangle pop)
Precocious talent—two teen sisters tossing out some of the best jangle-pop this side of the 1980s like it was nothing. “Yes It’s True” adds some shoegaze warble to the production, hinting at new directions yet to come.

The Cosmic Tones Research Trio – The Cosmic Tones Research Trio (Jazz)
Spiritual jazz explorations and incantations, confidently balancing invention with reassurance. The energetic “Sankofa” is the standout, but there isn’t a track here that isn’t worth some concentrated reflection.

The Laughing Chimes – Whispers in the Speech Machine (Jangle pop)

The New Eves – The New Eve is Rising (Post-punk)

The Sorcerers – Other Worlds And Habitats (Jazz)

The Sure Fire Soul Ensemble – Gemini (Soul)

🇨🇦 The World Next Door – Chaotic Mixing (Ambient)
Don’t let the title throw you, these are absolutely meticulous soundscapes (in the best way).

Thought Bubble – Mostly True (Psychedelic / Trip hop)

thruoutin – A Desolate Hue (Ambient)
Mellow, abstract, downcast

Titanic – HAGEN (Art rock)
Calling this art rock because I don’t know what else to say, but that doesn’t begin to touch on the drama, the dynamics, the effortless shifts from abrasive noise to harmonic bliss. I feel like I’ve barely begun digesting this one.

Tony Molina – On This Day (Jangle pop)

Uh – pleroma EP (Experimental)
A “wondrous coalescence of rave, pastoralism and futurism” resolving as Eno-ish pop. “I Want My Life Back” pops into my head regularly.

Vanbur – Of Becoming (Dream pop)

Vega Trails – Sierra Tracks (Jazz)

Warrington-Runcorn New Town Development Plan – Public Works and Utilities (Electronic)
WRNTDP’s urban synthscapes are never less than excellent; the optimistic “Renewal and Regenration” & the sprawling “The People Matter” are welcome additions to the plan.

🇨🇦 Wihtikow – ᐊᐦᒐᕽ (Electronic)
Darkly beat-driven shoegaze, or distorted BoC-ish electronica, or both at the same time.

Winter – Adult Romantix (Indie rock)
More muscular than her usual gossamer-gaze, but no less considered & intricate.

Woo – Music to Watch Seeds Grow By 001: Woo (Sweet Peas) (Experimental)
Patient as the title impies, one of the cult duo’s most consistent releases.

🇨🇦 Yoo Doo Right, 🇨🇦 Population II, Nolan Potter – Yoo II avec Nolan Potter (Psychedelic / Space Rock)
Space rock, psych, Zappa-esque jams, free jazz skronk — everything you want when it’s time to crank the volume and hide in a wall of sound. The kind of noisy that loops back to soothing.

AM Gold 2024

I would never be so bold as to declare a list of the best albums of a given year. More music now comes out in a day than used to get released in a full year; with a field that large, it’s an act of hubris to speak with any confidence about objective standings and impartial rankings.

Instead, this is just a list of 100 101 albums that made their way to The AM in 2024 that are worth a listen if you enjoy the show’s mix of off-beat easy listening. Hosting the show is a great way to force myself to listen to as much new music as I can—but it also means I tend to listen for a particular mood, namely songs that sound good as you’re waking up on a Monday morning. That means this list gravitates heavily towards that vibe, so if you’re looking for abrasive and energetic tracks, this list isn’t that, by and large.

For the first time in many a year, the albums aren’t listed alphabetically—it’s an honest-to-goodness countdown. There are so many lists out there that it felt unfair to throw another 100 albums at you without at least some effort to help you pick where to put your attention. That said, I still fully believe music isn’t a competition and this ranking should be taken with a grain of salt. Ask me tomorrow and I might end up with a very different order; the fine gradations are arbitrary, and even the broad sweeps are a matter of mood as much as anything.

Skim through it in order from #100-#1* or just throw the playlist below on shuffle—but do make a point of checking these albums out. And an honorable mention goes to The Cure’s three-hour concert video of Songs of a Lost World and classic songs; the album is solid, but I think it works significantly better in a live format, and kudos to them for releasing such an epic performance free on YouTube.

*The Spotify playlist is missing about five tracks that weren’t in their system. All albums below link to the relevant Bandcamp page if it was available, or to Spotify if not.

100. Tomo Katsurada – Dream of the Egg

Recommended if you like (RIYL): Kikagaku Moyo, homemade psychedelia, eggs

99. Hélène Vogelsinger – Ethereal Dissolution

RIYL: Cascading modular synths, unexpected harmonies, and overwhelming sonic textures

98. Trees Speak – TimeFold

RIYL: Tangerine dreams and concise kosmische explorations

97. The Sorcerers – I Too Am a Stranger

RIYL: Upbeat Ethiojazz by way of northern England

96. Loula Yorke – speak, thou vast and venerable head

RIYL: Droning downtempo compositions, atmospheric field recordings

95. Ivan the Tolerable – Time is a Grave

RIYL: Haunted home-made psych-jazz

94. Drum & Lace – Onda

RIYL: Hypnotic ambient beats, winter landscapes

93. Church Chords – elvis, he was Schlager

RIYL: Experimental pop for weirdos and jazz heads

92. Ariel Kalma, Jeremiah Chiu & Marta Sofia Honer – The Closest Thing to Silence

RIYL: Inner journies and meditative moods

91. Lynn Avery, Cole Poulice – Phantasy & Reality

RIYL: Patient, spacious ambient jazz

90. Osmanthus – Between Seasons

RIYL: Intermingling neo-classical and experimental electronic impulses

89. Tristan De Liege – Fields

RIYL: Intricate but hazy downtempo electronics

88. Temporal Waves – Temporal Waves

RIYL: Tabla, synthwave, psychedelia, and grandeur

87. Group Listening – Walks

RIYL: Long walks through the countryside

86. Hollie Kenniff – For Forever

RIYL: Patient, melodic ambient sounds, slow builds, reverb

85. Warrington Runcorn New Town Development Plan – Your Community Hub

RIYL: Municipal planning, analog synths, ridiculous band names, ’70s sci-fi

84. Seahawks – Time Enough for Love

RIYL: New age soundscapes, gentle pulsing beats

83. Clinic Stars – Only Hinting

RIYL: The gauzest of dream-pop sounds

82. Mark McGuire – Anhedonia

RIYL: Emeralds (the band), looping guitar lines

81. Charbonneau / Amato – Enflammer le désert (OST)

RIYL: Melodic synths and vast expanses

80. The Hologram People – Isola Dei Morti Viventi

RIYL: Italian horror soundtracks, library grooves

79. Jane Weaver – Love in Constant Spectacle

RIYL: World-weary psych pop that still manages to shimmer

78. Dean McPhee – Astral Gold

RIYL: Acoustic explorations of distant galaxies

77. Miyauchi Yuri – Beta 2

RIYL: Blissfully glitchy Japanese electronics

76. p:ano – ba ba ba

RIYL: Nick Krgovich, Kellarisa, contemplative indie pop

75. Yasmin Williams – Acadia

RIYL: Joyfully melodic fingerpicked guitar

74. Jahari Massamba Unit – YHWH is LOVE

RIYL: Trippy instrumentals, Karriem Riggins, Madlib

73. Bananagun – Why is the Colour of the Sky

RIYL: Sun-baked (and otherwise-baked) psychedelia

72. Circles Around the Sun, Mikaela Davis – After Sunrise

RIYL: Harps, disco, basking in the afterglow

71. Jilk – Soft in Shape and Meaning

RIYL: Post-rock improvizations and experimental collectives

70. Retep Folo & Dorothy Moskowitz – The Afterlife Album

RIYL: Outsider electronics, ’60s psychedelia, hauntology more broadly, great cover art

69. Hawksmoor – Oneironautics

RIYL: German art-rock from decades past, Robert Fripp, feeling a little pretentious

68. Dissolve in Sepia – Spaciousness

RIYL: Jazzy genre-fluid downtempo compositions

67. Ana Butterss – Mighty Vertebrate

RIYL: Groove-based experimental music, Jeff Parker, the future of jazz

66. Molly Lewis – On the Lips

RIYL: Whistling, easy listening, exotica, more whistling

65. SHOLTO – Letting Go of Forever

RIYL: 60’s library grooves, ’70s movie soundtracks, 2000s chillout music

64. Big Brave – A Chaos of Flowers

RIYL: Folk music written by thunderclouds

63. Misha Panfilov – Frutaria Electrónica


RIYL: The very cheesiest synth sounds, getting lost in whorls and eddies of melody

62. Polypores – Unlimited Lives

RIYL: Self-contained sonic universes coaxed from modular synths

61. Beak> – >>>>

RIYL: Haunted folk, the gentler side of krautrock, Portishead, pervasive eerieness

60. Fourtet – Three

RIYL: Anything Keiran Hebden has done in the last 20 years

59. Godspeed You! Black Emperor – No Title as of 13 February 2024 28,340 Dead

RIYL: Slow builds, catharsis, walls of noise

58. Daisy Rickman – Howl

RIYL: Spooky psych-folk, Nico, drones and jangles

57. Einstürzende Neubauten – Rampen (apm: alien pop music)

RIYL: Subtle melodies, balancing abrasion and beauty, pop music made by aliens

56. Jon Hopkins – RITUAL

RIYL: Patience, subtlety, guided journies through altered states

55. Von Spar, Eiko Ishibashi – Album I

RIYL: Contemporary Japanese movie soundtracks, German art-rock, experimental sounds

54. Badbadnotgood – Mid:Spiral

RIYL: Instrumental jazz, neo-soul, soundtrack jazz, hearing people mellow out a bit

53. Erki Pärnoja – Rumba

RIYL: Playful Estonian instrumentals, tasteful little guitar licks, avoiding being too flashy

52. Unessential Oils – Unessential Oils

RIYL: Plants & Animals, Tropicalia, Canadian indie pop

51. Bibi Club – Feu de garde

RIYL: Jangling guitars, bilingual vocals, spritely energy

50. Dummy – Free Energy

RIYL: Transient random noise bursts, drone-pop

49. Jon McKiel – Hex

RIYL: East Coast Canadian indie-pop experimentalism

48. Andre Ethier – Cold Spaghetti

RIYL: Subdued, observational singer-songwriters

47. Various Artists – TRANSA

RIYL: An expansive and affirmational exploration of transition

46. maya ongaku – Electronic Phantoms

RIYL: The softer side of Japanese psychedelia

45. Luka Kuplowsky – How Can I Possibly Sleep When There Is Music?

RIYL: Poetry, Sandro Perri, Bohemianism, revelling in beauty but in a fairly chill way

44. Psychic Temple – Doggie Paddlin’ Thru the Cosmic Conscousness

RIYL: The most cosmic of cosmic American music, subdued space-country jams

43. Ethnic Heritage Ensemble – Open Me, A Higher Consciousness of Sound and Spirit

RIYL: 50-year-old jazz collectives trying cello, viola, and violin on for size

42. Nala Sinephro – Endlessness

RIYL: Dissolving the boundaries between jazz, neo-classical, ambient, and electronic

41. BASIC – This Is BASIC

RIYL: The Durutti Column, Chris Forsyth, sideways approaches to art-rock instrumentals

40. Peel Dream Magazine – Rose Main Reading Room

RIYL: Breezy, unpretentious bedroom pop

39. Laurent Dury – Organic Minimalism

RIYL: TV soundtracks, library music, contemporary classical sounds

38. Scions – To Cry Out in the Wilderness

RIYL: Experimental, affirmational, confrontational art-rock

37. OHMA – On Loving Earth

RIYL: Open-hearted instrumental collaborations, acoustic guitar and flute

36. Jennifer Castle – Camelot

RIYL: ’70s folk, alt-country, impeccable songwriting

35. Earthen Sea – Recollection

RIYL: A downbeat, dubby, tribute to ECM jazz

34. The Smile – Cutouts

RIYL: Thom Yorke, Jonny Greenwood and Tom Skinner just living in the moment

33. Dialect – Atlas of Green

RIYL: Sonic sculptures and electroacoustic experiments

32. Project Gemini – Colours & Light

RIYL: Funky psychedelia, deep soundtrack grooves, haunted forests

31. Bernardino Femminielli – Opéra Bouffe

RIYL: Serge Gainsbourg, melodrama, indulgence

30. Memorials – Memorial Waterslides

RIYL: Electrolane, Wire, art-rock excellence

29. Jessica Pratt – Here In the Pitch

RIYL: “spectral ’60s pop, Hollywood psychedelia and bossa nova” (because the bio says it best)

28. Eric Chenaux Trio – Delights of My Life

RIYL: Lost jazz standards flipped inside out

27. Zachary Gray – Suburbia EP

RIYL: East-coast IDM, headphone beats, wistfulness in musical form

26. Bilal Nasser – How Can We Say Nothing

RIYL: Post-classical guitar, shoegaze, tension, beauty and catharsis

25. Ayal Senior – Ora

RIYL: Psych-folk instrumentals, desert soundscapes, tasteful prog overtones

24. Beth Gibbons – Lives Outgrown

RIYL: Portishead without the trip-hop, melancholy folk, realizing you’re aging and should probably accept it

23. Elori Saxl – Earth Focus OST

RIYL: PBS, high-concept jazz, erasing the lines between nature and architecture

22. The Soundcarriers – Through Other Reflections

RIYL: Impeccable throwback psych-pop, trippy harmonies, bands that deserve more attention

21. Nick Schofield – Ambient Ensemble

RIYL: Ambient ensembles, electroacoustic collaborations, feeling at peace with your surroundings

20. Buildings and Food – Echo the Field

RIYL: Hope, warmth, and comfort conveyed through buzzing synths and ASMR beats

19. Geotic – The Anchorite

RIYL: Baths, Bibio, tape hiss, surprising moments of distorted bliss

18. Shabaka – Perceive Its Beauty, Acknowledge Its Grace

RIYL: Beauty, grace, ambient jazz, woodwinds, Moses Sumney, Laraaji, breathing

17. Fuubutsushi – Meridians

RIYL: Subtle, meditative jazz and post-rock with the occassional melodromatic flourish

16. Sam Wilson – Wintertides

RIYL: Intricate instrumental folk-jazz, an unusual blend of invention and accessibility

15.5. Loving – Any Light

(.5 because I missed this on the initial draft and that’s unforgiveable)

RIYL: Classic AM radio, Jungian psychology, pitch-perfect folk-rock

15. Organic Pulse Ensemble – Zither Suite

RIYL: Can’t think of anything clever because I don’t understand how it’s possible for one musician to singlehandly make a jazz album that feels this multifaceted

14. ROY – Spoons for the World

RIYL: Scott Walker, Lee Hazlewood, deep voices singing cosmic country

13. Andrew Wasylyk, Tommy Perman – Ash Grey and the Gull Glides On

RIYL: Perfect pairings, jazz-folk-electronic fusions, subtle details, chanted vocals, small doses of Arab Strap

12. Tomin – A Willed and Conscious Balance

RIYL: The International Anthem version of large-ensemble jazz, featuring strings and horns aplenty

11. Lau Ro – Cabana

RIYL: Wax Machine, MPB, soft psychedelia, instrospection

10. SW Hedrick – Devotional Drift Vol. 1

RIYL: Metal guitarists embracing transcendental rhythms and meditative compositions

9. Hiro Ama – Music for Peace and Harmony

RIYL: Japanese synthesizers, romantic ideals, gentle reassurances

8. Cindy Lee – Diamond Jubilee

RIYL: Singular visions, impeccable musicianship, girl group pop, subversive instincts, the sound of letting people in, at least just a little

7. Caméra – Caméra

RIYL: Slowing down, getting playful, making music for the joy of it

6. Peggy Lee & Cole Schmidt – Forever Stories Of: Moving Parties

RIYL: Unusually expansive cello and guitar-led compositions pulling from post-rock, experimental jazz, ’70s prog and beyond

5. SiP – Leos Ultras

RIYL: Fourth-world ditties that radiate warmth, wisdom and joy

4. Tristan Arp – a pool, a portal

RIYL: Closing your eyes, opening your ears, and getting lost in strange new world

3. Hypnodrone Ensemble – The Problem Is In The Sender – Do Not Tamper With The Receiver

RIYL: Waves of sound enveloping you until the rest of the world just disappears

2. Fabiano do Nascimento, Sam Gendel – The Room

RIYL: The year’s purest expression of melody, acoustic artists in absolute alignment

1. Ezra Feinberg – Soft Power

RIYL: Beauty in simplicity, sipping drinks from the Penguin Cafe, feeling like maybe it’s going to be ok

March at the movies

Capsule reviews and stray thoughts from March 2024. All reviews via Letterboxd.

Ghostwatch (1992)

Even knowing some of the stories (the public inquiry, traumatized children, banned from the air for a decade) I still assumed this would be more spooky than scary. I mean, how far would the BBC really go with a fake live broadcast ghost story?

Turns out, pretty damn far. Ghostwatch is exceptionally well done, slowly ratcheting the tension for the first 70 minutes and then absolutely going for broke. The backstory that develops is so much darker than I would have expected, and the “found footage” aspect is clever and effective, seven years before Blair Witch, and with the added credibility of BBC presenters.

Seriously scarier than most theatrical horror movies. No wonder the British Journal of Medicine apparently cited it as the first TV show to cause PTSD in children.

Max Headroom: 20 Minutes into the Future (1985)

I was expecting more Max Headroom in this, to be honest.

So you have an advertising conspiracy creating concentrated ads that have the potential to explode people—but only the laziest slobs who are most susceptible to overstimulation. You have the intrepid reporter as hero, the pirate TV host who stumbles into a hit show, and the glitchy CG character (actually just some well-made prosthetics) who’s destined to be a sensation.

A lot of good elements, but the whole doesn’t really add up to much. Impressive that someone saw the potential for a mass-market phenomenon in the tiny clips of Max, because this scrappy made-for-TV cyber-punk thriller really is just seeds and not much more.

Love Lies Bleeding (2024)

Must be the season of the pulpy lesbian crime dramedy.

But despite the high-level, completely superficial similarities to Drive-Away Dolls, this is very much its own thing, a mix of magic realism, body horror, and off-kilter eroticism that’s hard to take your eyes off of (except in a couple of scenes that push the violence to limits where I had no trouble averting my eyes). I’ve heard complaints that the climax is too A24, but I haven’t hit my saturation point on their aesthetic and would gently push back on the idea that they even have a consistent enough one that it’s worth getting up in arms about.

Ed Harris would make a great Cryptkeeper.

Dune: Part Two (2024)

Maybe it’s the depression talking, but I didn’t really connect with this. Not to say I didn’t marvel at it—Villeneuve is undoubtedly a master of scale and Dune: Part Two looks, sounds, and feels absolutely monumental. But that scale is a cudgel; I didn’t feel moved so much as beaten into submission.

Some of it I loved. The early shot of soldiers hovering up a mountainside was gorgeous. Javier Bardem smuggling unexpected warmth and humour into such a self-serious setting. The brief detour to HR Giger’s Riefenstahl‘s Ancient Rome under a black hole sun. The craft that went into all of this is incredible, and I’m glad to have seen it all on Imax, like God intended.

Aside from the score and a completely miscast Christopher Walken, there wasn’t much I actively disliked. I think it’s more that the scale demands detachment; when everything in a film is this large, it becomes inhuman, and the characters never managed to fill in that space for me. Maybe that’s appropriate for a story about destiny and the grand sweep of history, but this still could have used a bit more life.

The Holdovers (2023)

Not exactly a “they don’t make ’em like this anymore” situation, but it’s a bit telling that when they do make ’em, so much effort is put into creating the illusion that it’s a 50-year-old film that’s somehow been rediscovered.

Everything about this is comforting to me. The cranky holiday mood, the well-worn character arcs, just the right vibe for someone who ocassionally wonders if he’s a misanthropist but is very much a softy when you get down to it. Giamatti’s character is definitely how I’ve always pictured my future self, so even if his redemption arc is a little cliched, it’s still satisfying. And it’s impressive that this is Sessa’s screen debut; holding your own against Giamatti at his best has to be a daunting first assignment.

Small nit to pick, but with so much care put into making this feel period appropriate, it does seem like an odd choice to include a couple post-millennial songs on the soundtrack, even if they didn’t feel particularly out of place. Didn’t detract, I’m just curious what the logic was.

(Also, I’m very curious how the real-world plagiarism accusations pan out.)

A Bucket of Blood (1959)

I’m an unashamed member of the Dick Miller Appreciation Society, so it’s great to see him hamming it up in one of his earliest roles. Not as grisly as the title led me to think, with a plot that actually hews fairly close to Little Shop of Horrors (another Corman flick), but worth watching in its own right for the loving shots at Beat culture. The film opens with a poet who is meant to be pompous and insufferable and in all honesty, I kind of dug it. Not enough to embark on a murderous art career, but it still spoke to me, for whatever that’s worth.

Ishtar (1987)

I’m glad the consensus on this has shifted in the last few years so I don’t have to wonder if I’m just being contrarian when I say this was a delight. Some of the loudest laughter I’ve had at a movie in a long while. Beatty and Hoffman are great as aspiring songwriters who are blissfully oblivious to how awful they are, and the film strikes a good balance of laughing at them and buying into the joy of collaborating on even terrible music. (Having them play againt type is also fun; Beatty is surprisingly good at turning his charisma off completely.)

I do understand the criticism that it loses steam when they leave New York, but even if the idiots abroad plot distracts from what makes the first 20 minutes and especially the last 5 so great, it also gives us a blind camel and Charles Grodin’s CIA man, and I wouldn’t want to give up either of those things.

It really goes to show how much the pop culture memory of a thing can be so disconnected from the reality. I can’t imagine that audience would’ve viscerally disliked this if they’d actually seen it, and not been pre-poisoned by the bad press. There are much worse movies out there with much better reputations.

Road House (2024)

For a good Buick, watch the original instead. 

Everything has to be a trauma plot now. Can’t just have the world’s most competent zen bouncer working his magic. It has to be a borderline suicidal guy navigating his guilt and anger management issues — when he isn’t being incongruously zen, too. Very inconsistent characterization. 

My college essay of this would be on how the remake reflects the erosion of America’s faith in expertise, but that’s a bit much for what seems like it’s mostly an excuse for ol’ Jake to show off his abs (and I can’t blame him…). At least he seems to be having fun. 

The fact they renamed the road house Road House speaks poorly for the modern world.

Immaculate (2024)

If I was ever going to watch this (a horror film that’s probably most easily summarized as Suspiria meets Rosemary’s Baby in a convent), Good Friday was probably the right day for it. Otherwise a very middle-of-the-road horror film that I will probably forget about entirely in a week or two. Beautiful setting, though, and some pretty effective sound design.

Someone brought a kid who was maybe 12 to the screening, which seemed like an odd choice.

February at the movies

Capsule reviews and stray thoughts from February 2024. All reviews via Letterboxd.

American Fiction (2023)

Felt like a bit of a bait and switch, but a thematically appropriate one, at least. The trailer had me imagining Boots Riley energy, or maybe an updated spin on Bamboozled, but a few sequences aside, that’s not what this is up to at all. This is a family dramedy with an occasional subplot about literary fraud, not an angry satire about the state of Black representation in pop culture. It does dig in on the satire every so often, and yeah some of those shots it takes are great (one involving an RBG poster definitely did me in), but that feels secondary to the real relationships that drive the film.

Which is part of what makes the ending feel like a cheat. More charitably, it makes sense for the satire I thought I was getting, but not for the human story that was actually the bulk of the movie. It leaves the whole thing feeling more muddled than I expected for a best picture nominee, but even that somehow seems like an extension of the point the film is making.

The Tragedy of Macbeth (2021)

Ever since this was first announced I’ve been curious why Joel Coen would choose this as his first solo project. Now that I’ve finally seen it, I’m still unsure. I see the connections to other Coen works, but as far as why this film at this time, I’m still at a bit of a loss.

Visually it’s magnificent, and feels like a love letter to European arthouse from Caligari and Joan of Arc to the Seventh Seal. It feels meticulous almost to the point of being overfussed, but when you get images like the reflection of the weird sisters in their introduction, it’s hard to complain. The performances are also universally strong, at least in their individual moments, but there’s some of the same rigidity in the way they come together that keeps it from conveying the tragedy of the title. Even knowing the shape of the plot, I didn’t feel the sweep of the narrative, which was surprising given the calibre of talent involved in every part of this.

Certainly worth watching, but as a curiousity more than a statement.

Black Mirror: Demon 79 (2023)

I fell off of Black Mirror years ago, so no surprise that the episode that’s most criticized for shedding basically all the show’s hallmarks is also the one I’ve enjoyed the most in a long while. Nice period textures, goofy plot, more interested in story than message (though the political subtext is far from subtle)—it’s a 75-minute demon-murder lark and if a stalled spinoff of Black Mirror is what it took to get it made, so be it.

Starman (1984)

Nice to see John Carpenter straying from the nihilism of so much of his work for something sweet and even a little silly. Bridges’ performance as an alien discovering how to use its new human body could have been irritating, but he settles into the right balance of quirky but contained. I love the way his attention is always in motion, the way he seems unfamiliar in his body, never quite using it properly. Something about the physicality struck me as bird-like, and I really wonder if that was intentional.

I can see why the studios worried this would seem too similar to ET, but 40 years on, they very much feel like different stories for different audiences. Watching it I found myself thinking of Contact more than anything Spielberg—maybe because I’ve seen it more recently, but the sense of hope, the love of science (and SETI), the loathing of militarism, and even the basic idea of the alien taking the form of a lost loved one, it’s hard to deny the echoes.

His Girl Friday (1940)

A rewatch because it’s been more than a few years and my partner has never seen it. It’s billed as a screwball romance, but I’m not sure whether it’s a love story or a hostage negotiation. Either way I laughed a lot.

This movie basically never takes a breath, except when a room full of journalists pauses to reflect on the glibness and cynicism of their worldview, laid bare by a desperate woman at the end of her rope. The fact the movie finds room for that, and then jumps right back into the snappiest, overlappingest dialogue this side of, well, anything, is impressive as heck.

Insert Coin (2020)

Fairly standard talking-head-style documentary about Midway Games, the company behind Mortal Kombat, NBA Jam, and other over-the-top arcade classics. Good for background viewing, but not if you’re looking for something with a perspective or a message beyond “remember these games?”

A guy in this thinks he’s being charming by saying he used probably illegal clauses in contracts and an army of lawyers to coerce staff into turning down better offer from competitors. So many people think they’re clever when they’re actually just cruel.

Amelie (2001)

(Post-Valentines Day screening at the Globe Cinema)

23 years ago I watched this at a beautiful local art house that has since been demolished and turned into a seemingly permanent development project that was recently used as a post-apocalyptic ruin in a major television series. As far as cinematic experiences in Calgary go, that was a foundational one for me—it was a joyful shared experience and a high that I’ve had a hard time matching over the years. It was such a perfect film for me at that time, its breathless pace, the whimsy and inventiveness, and just the allure of something foreign and different was catnip to my inexperienced self.

I knew I wouldn’t have the same reaction watching it now, even if it was in the local art house across the street from the shell of where I first watched it. But I was pleasantly surprised by how much of that joy it still holds. There are a lot more choices in it that I would second guess, and it doesn’t feel so entirely sui generis, but it’s still lovely, funny, generous, and warm, with a fantastic score and a relentless pace.

I do miss that initial viewing, though, and I really hope this city still has places that can give young movie fans an equivalent experience.

Drive-Away Dolls (2024)

Just the kind of pulpy, dark, throwaway fun I was looking for. It reminds me of the sort of post-Pulp Fiction gangster comedies that were ubiquitous in the late ’90s, which I guess now count as comforting, nostalgic viewing for me. I don’t think this means I have to rewatch The Way of the Gun and Go now, but I suppose I should consider it.

It doesn’t quite have the Coen rhythm to it, but it feels like Ethan had a lot of fun putting this together, which is good enough for me. I hadn’t intentionally tried to watch this and Macbeth in the same month, and I don’t want to overstate how much each film says about directors who have made such a wide range of movies, but it’s interesting for Joel to swing so heavy for prestige and Ethan for pulp. If that’s reflective of their usual dynamic, it’s easy to understand why they’d want to splut up for a bit, but they’re definitely better together.

I hope Curlie is ok.

Uzumaki (2000)

Another one I haven’t revisited in probably 22 years. My first viewing was very much in my “weird for weird’s sake” phase of movie-watching (which is essential, but also probably a bit insufferable), so I was worried this wouldn’t hold up at all. Especially given all the middling reviews on Letterboxd and my own increased awareness of the source material.

Seeing it with relatively fresh eyes, I’ll admit it’s not a masterpiece by any stretch, but it does have an atmosphere to it, along with imagery strong enough to stick with me for two decades. Most of the credit for that goes to Junji Ito, I’m sure, and memorable as it is, the imagery doesn’t hold a candle to his original artwork (surreal horror will always work better in more abstracted media). But viewed on its own, this is still a solid slice of weird cinematic horror—not scary, not even really creepy, but still capable of getting under the skin.

Side note: I watched a somewhat low-res version in YouTube, and I have to say, the digital decay sort of suits it? The way large chunks of the screen pop in and out of clarity based on the whims of the algorithm, it has this ever-shifting lack of reality that just works. That notion that a medium’s flaws are what you end up nostalgic for, strikes yet again.

January at the movies

Capsule reviews and stray thoughts on what I watched in January (and a bit of December). All reviews via Letterboxd.

Poor Things (2023)

On the one hand it’s certainly fun watching a self-proclaimed hedonist destroyed by a woman who genuinely doesn’t care about the rules of polite society, and the way supposedly intelligent men fall in love with a mental six-year-old is obviously meant to be stinging. But I can’t shake the feeling that this is a very masculine take on female liberation, especially in its fascination with sexuality to the exclusion of almost everything else. Bella is a cipher for most of the film, more defined by her effect on others than by her own inner life. Her alternative to the possessiveness of men is pure callousness verging on intentional cruelty. She’s a spin on the magic pixie dream girl, but less a subversion than a caricature. 

Except when she isn’t, and maybe that’s part of showing someone essentially inventing themself, and pushing against social limits in the process. You can’t be fully developed and a work in process at the same time. So sometimes she’s a male fantasy or a nightmare, others she’s a real person trying to understand her past and define her future. 

Anyway, it’s impressive to see what a stylist Lanthimos has become here. The performances are mostly sharp, and the production design and costuming deserve all the awards they’re bound to get. This is vivid, imaginative, and fun, but it does leave me feeling conflicted.

The Creator (2023)

Hero’s journey, blow up the Death Star with the Force space fantasy with a bit of hand-wavey political subtext for good measure. I’m glad that a non-franchise story can get told on this scale, but if I’d realize I was getting into a 2.25-hour set of military skirmishes with shades of Eastern mysticism thrown in as set-dressing, I would’ve just accepted it as “not my thing” and moved along. There’s not nearly enough time spent establishing the relationship that’s meant to anchor the story, so it relies on indistinguishable action sequences and mawkish sentimentality for interest and gravitas respectively, and I found neither to be all that effective. I know others who enjoyed it, but aside from the visuals I found it quite dull.

Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret (2023)

Our choice for first movie of 2024 was between this and a cult post-apocalyptic Aussie action film, and this was definitely the better choice. Sharp, fun, and genuine. Even with the title I didn’t realize how much religion would play into this, but even that is handled deftly. Good stuff.

Dream Scenario (2023)

I saw another review on Letterboxd that said this movie takes a fantastic premise and then takes the least interesting route at every opportunity. That’s overly harsh, but it’s not totally unfair, either. At a certain point, the movie drifts from being about a character responding to an absurd situation, to being about cancel culture and fame and the strokes just keep getting more and more broad. It gives way to a pretty rote downward spiral, which is disappointing given the odd but engaging specificity of the early scenes.

That said, I will always enjoy watching Tim Meadows doing his thing. I don’t know what it is exactly, but he’s just such a steady presence. He’s never let me down.

Paris, Texas (1984)

Mild spoilers

Travis starts the film as someone who doesn’t want to be saved, and ends it as someone who probably doesn’t deserve to be—he aims for understanding instead of atonement, and while he seems to recognize that he’s still a destructive force (hence the desire to disappear again), he doesn’t see that even his better intentions are still selfish and poorly thought through.

It’s tough, because Stanton is so likeable, and what Travis has done is so horrific. I want him to do better, or to be punished but it’s neither: he emerges from purgatory and then goes back to it, stuck in a stasis with nothing resolved. He runs from himself, puts himself in a place with no language and no memory, and leaves everyone else with the challenge of functioning and rebuilding and carrying on.

The Quick and the Dead (1995)

The ’90s were pretty great for getting a bunch of fantastic character actors, a weirdo director, picking an underappreciated genre, and just going for it. I don’t know for sure that this got greenlit after Pulp Fiction became a smash, but it really feels like it’s of that era where no one quite knew what was going to work, so they took a bunch of swings just to see what would happen.

Gene Hackman is great as always, a pre-Titanic DiCaprio is somehow already mocking his pretty-boy image a year before Romeo + Juliet even came out, and even dang-ol’ Woody Strode makes a cameo. Raimi takes the close-up-on-the-eyes thing to ridiculous extremes. Lance Henriksen gets to play the least Lance Henriksen role I’ve ever seen and he eats it up. Russell Crowe is even almost likeable.

This is just fun, is what I’m saying.

The Rat Catcher (2023)

First of Wes Anderson’s Roald Dahl shorts that I’ve seen (we don’t have a Netflix subscription right now), and the tone is certainly something. Somewhere between storytime, children’s theatre, and student film, albeit with incredibly talented people handling all the details.

I almost would’ve preferred if the short hadn’t used a prop/animated rat at all—they were so committed to the bit of imaginary props that it was a bit of a letdown to drop it. Otherwise, I’m not really sure what to make of this. It’s a fun diversion, and it seems like that’s probably all they were going for, so… well done, I suppose.

Ruthless People (1986)

Would never have guessed that this is ZAZ (directorial trio Zucker Abrams Zucker)—the sense of humour is completely different from your Airplanes and Police Squads and Hot Shots, much more grimy and mean and, well, Danny Devito-y, for lack of a better term. And I think it would’ve been better with someone like Devito at the helm really playing up those elements, because as it is, it’s directed a little more lighthearted than the plot and subject matter really call for. In other words, it’s not vicious enough for how vicious it is, if that makes sense.

But Bill Pullman is phenomenal in this, and they gave Sally Cruikshank some work on the opening credits, so I’m still all for it.

Elemental (2023)

Something felt off in the scale of this. There’s such elaborate world building in its depiction of a massive city populated by elemental creatures; you just know someone has a 100-page bible outlining each Element’s architecture and cultural history and technological preferences. The story itself is relatively intimate and personal, but because the world is so elaborate, it feels like it’s is going to go bigger—there are recurring floods in the city that seem poised to open to some Chinatown-style conspiracy, or at least something that ties more deeply into the narrative—but it never does. It’s just there because the filmmakers needed a big set piece, even though the stakes of the smaller story would have been more than enough. 

Magic (1978)

It would be fun to sell people on this Anthony Hopkins muderous puppet movie by saying “it’s from the author of the Princess Bride” just to see what happens.

The main character, a musician/ventriloquist named Corky, is more a Michael Moriarty character than a Hopkins one—my memory is already sort of swapping in Moriarty’s jazz musician from Q: The Winged Serpent into the role—but Hopkins really does give this his all. Ann Margret has to sell the idea that anyone would find this act charming enough to throw away your life, and does a decent job showing the desperation that would require. It stretches credulity more than a few times, but it’s effective all around. 

I fully believe that Burgess Meredith’s aging agent would pitch a combination ventriloquist/magician act as the next big thing; less confident audiences would eat it up, but hey, I wasn’t alive in 1978 so what do I know. They reference Steve Martin and Rich Little and maybe they saw that as proof of a neo-vaudeville revival. So, sure.