The Hairsplitter Year End Music List 2015, Part Two: The Best Albums of 2015
by The Editors, December 24, 2015
As promised, we are pleased to present our picks for the best albums of 2015, by writer. This year we teamed up with the good folks at The Collapsar to produce a true best-of list based on many writers’ choices. Below are each writer’s individual list, sometimes with blurbs, sometimes without. You’ll find a number of albums that span lists—Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly and Sufjan Stevens’s Carrie & Lowell being the most obvious instances. You’ll also find a handful of albums that The Hairsplitter carried reviews of in 2015, such as Deafheaven’s New Bermuda and Battles’s excellent new album, La Di Da Di.
Now, without further ado, here we go. If 2016’s new music is half as good as 2015’s was, we’re in for a treat.
P.S. Happy holidays from all of us at The Hairsplitter! See you in the future.
Andrew Arnold
1. Kendrick Lamar, To Pimp a Butterfly
Such a needed album at the right time. Maximizing what the form can accomplish.
2. Father John Misty, I Love You, Honeybear
My wife hates him. My friends question the man. But there’s no doubt his lyrics are funny and thoughtful.
3. Sleater-Kinney, No Cities to Love
Solid album. A strong return after some time off. Even better live.
4. Leon Bridges, Going Home
Don’t care if he’s retro- or neo-soul; he’s doing his own thing. One of the albums I still sing in the shower.
5. Vijay Iyer Trio, Break Stuff
Hard to rank this above Washington’s, but I listen to this album and hear all the jazz I love.
6. Sufjan Stevens, Carrie & Lowell
Not an easy listen, but my favorite Sufjan Stevens album since Illinois.
7. Kamasi Washington, The Epic
Aggressive and wonderful.
8. Alabama Shakes, Sound & Color
Someone once told me Alabama Shakes were bullshit. Everyone has an opinion, but this album shows growth and exploration while staying themselves.
9. The Internet, Ego Death
Found this one late in the year. A great mix of influences into an album better listened to as whole than separate tracks.
10. Songhoy Blues, Music in Exile
Sure, I don’t know the words. But a great blues album speaks its own language.
Matt Austin
1. Oneohtrix Point Never, Garden of Delete
The sound of a thousand browser tabs opening simultaneously.
2. Battles, La Di Da Di
Their first truly instrumental record, Battles show their roots in Storm & Stress and Don Caballero by fusing their fractured melodies with the hesitant riffage of their previous groups.
3. Beauty Pill, Beauty Pill Describes Things As They Are
Triumphant return for this long-running ensemble, wrapping samples and rock instruments around solid songwriting.
4. Napalm Death, Apex Predator - Easy Meat
More than three decades in the game, and with this lineup for two, the grindcore vets prove they're still capable of making vital music.
5. Holly Herndon, Platform
Finally, an art record that is presented like one, utilizing technology as a channel for disconnection, alienation, and the calming dose of human touch.
6. Matthew Aker, Whitest Hunters, Blackest Hearts
A collection of analog synthesizers soundtrack a lost Cannon film.
7. Prefuse 73, Rivington Não Rio / Forsyth Gardens EP
Warp’s loss is the world's gain as Guillermo Scott Herren returns from the wilderness with more pointillist instrumental hip hop.
8. David Gilmour, Rattle That Lock
Lyricism was never Gilmour's strong suit, so while Polly Sampson provides the words, Gilmour delivers the most affecting collection of songs in his spotty solo career.
9. Freddie Gibbs, Shadow of a Doubt
Drugs, dames, and death are still the order of the day, but Gibbs has never been afraid to branch out, either with adventurous producers or utilizing his low-key but effective singing voice.
10. Enya, Dark Sky Island
For the Irish trio this is truly stripped-down: only 50 vocal tracks, barren piano, and their trademark plucked string section takes a couple songs to make an appearance.
Jeff Boyle
(in no particular order)
· Midori Hirano, And I Am Here
· Beauty Pill, Beauty Pill Describes Things As They Are
· Nils Frahm, Solo
· Umfang, Umfang
· United Bible Studies, The Ale’s What Cures Ye
· Jlin, Dark Energy
· Claire Potter and Bridget Hayden, Mother to No Swimming Laughing Child
· Dr. Yen Lo, Days with Dr. Yen Lo
· Hilde Marie Holsen, Ask
· AGF/Various Artists, A Deep and Mysterious Tone
James Brubaker
1. Sufjan Stevens, Carrie & Lowell
One of the most beautiful and difficult albums released in my lifetime. I’ve listened to Carrie & Lowell less than any other album on this list, but that’s only because of its power. This is emotionally devastating stuff.
2. Kendrick Lamar, To Pimp a Butterfly
At long last, Kendrick Lamar dropped To Pimp a Butterfly and it was worth the wait. I kept forgetting to put this album on early drafts of my list because it already feels bigger than 2015 in a timeless sort of way. Lamar’s fusion of funk and hip hop sounds like a future hip hop is going to embrace in a major way.
3. Grimes, Art Angels
This isn’t what I was expecting from Grimes … but then, what does anyone ever expect from Grimes? I love this album for many of the same reasons I loved Grimes’s last album—it plays with pop tropes while turning the genre inside out. But the thing about Art Angels is that, while Visions kept its pop impulses at arm’s length, deconstructing the form until we were left with echoes and snippets, here, Grimes embraces pop signifiers while balancing them with enough leftfield weird shit that the end result is as wild and art damaged as any of us possibly could have hoped for.
4. Carly Rae Jepsen, Emotion
None of us should be surprised that Carly Rae Jepsen gave us one of the best, purest pop albums in recent memory. The hooks are huge, the songs are hopeful and full of the kind of raw passion that only pop can really communicate. The only real surprise here is that this album hasn’t blown up the charts the way it deserves.
5. Courtney Barnett, Sometimes I Sit and Think and Sometimes I Just Sit
I’ve listened to this album probably more than any other album on this list. Barnett’s songwriting is fun and whip-smart. And I guess she’s up for a Grammy now? So that’s cool.
6. Fred Thomas, All Are Saved
I’ve been following Fred Thomas’s career for over a decade, now, and without a doubt, All Are Saved is his best work to date. Here, all of Thomas’s most exciting songwriting, arranging, and producing impulses converge, resulting in a daring album of emotionally charged songs about love, loss, and coming to grips with the hard shit.
7. Joanna Newsom, Divers
Part of me wants to rank this album higher, because it’s a flat-out masterpiece. Maybe the only reason it’s not higher on this list is because it’s Joanna Newsom, and we expect this level of craft from her? Like, we know she’s doing something extraordinary in her writing, performance, and arrangement, but we’re so used to it that it doesn’t really phase us? That’s where I’m at. But wow, what an album.
8. Kamasi Washington, The Epic
A huge, sprawling jazz masterwork drawing on decades of influences. This is one of the most exciting jazz albums I’ve heard in years. I’m pretty sure this is the first jazz album I’ve ever put on a year-end list. The arrangements and performances are impressive, but what makes this album so remarkable is its sheer scope and audacity.
9. Donnie Trumpet and the Social Experiment, Surf
On the strength of “Sunday Candy” alone, this album deserves a spot on my list. But here’s the thing—even without that song, Surf is such a fun, chill album. I can’t remember the last time I enjoyed just vibing on an album the way I enjoy vibing on this one. The arrangements are impeccable, and Chance the Rapper, while not at his most impressive, shows off a happy-go-lucky delivery that’s pretty hard to resist. Now if only we can get a vinyl release of this thing…
Tie: 10. Tobias Jesso Jr., Goon 10. Vince Staples, Summertime 06 10. Jamie XX, In Colour
Sorry to cheat, here, but I honestly couldn’t decide between these three albums. Jesso’s songwriting is some of the best I’ve heard in a while; Staples’s LP is a fantastic tour of hip hop past and present, with an impressive and undeniable urgency; and Jamie XX’s album might feature the strongest, fattest production of the year. What’s even more exciting/disheartening, as I had to leave even more amazing albums off of this list because, let’s just face it, 2015 was one of the best years in music in a while. I’m almost hoping 2016 slows down a bit so it’s a little bit easier to keep up.
Susannah Clark
1. Kendrick Lamar, To Pimp a Butterfly
2. Sufjan Stevens, Carrie & Lowell
3. Father John Misty, I Love You, Honeybear
4. Carly Rae Jepson, Emotion
5. Courtney Barnett, Sometime I Sit and Think, and Sometimes I Just Sit
6. Beach House, Depression Cherry
7. Joanna Newsom, Divers
8. The Mountain Goats, Beat the Champ
9. Tame Impala, Currents
10. The Tallest Man on Earth, Dark Bird is Home
Brad Efford
1. Courtney Barnett, Sometimes I Sit and Think, and Sometimes I Just Sit
2. Sufjan Stevens, Carrie & Lowell
3. Carly Rae Jepsen, Emotion
4. Joanna Newsom, Divers
5. Sleater-Kinney, No Cities to Love
6. Natalie Prass, Natalie Prass
7. Dave Rawlings Machine, Nashville Obsolete
8. The Tallest Man on Earth, Dark Bird is Home
Brian Flota
1. Kendrick Lamar, To Pimp a Butterfly
2. Matana Roberts, Coin Coin Chapter Three: River Run Thee
3. Lightning Bolt, Fantasy Empire
4. Aziz Ansari, Buried Alive!
5. Sleater-Kinney, No Cities to Love
6. Sunn O))), Kannon
7. Charles Gayle Trio, Christ Everlasting
8. Downtown Boys, Full Communism
9. Arca, Mutant
10. Bjork, Vulnicura
11. Slayer, Repentless
12. Chelsea Wolfe, Abyss
Dillon Hawkins
1. Kendrick Lamar, To Pimp a Butterfly
2. Sufjan Stevens, Carrie & Lowell
3. Sleater-Kinney, No Cities to Love
4. Beach House, Depression Cherry
5. Father John Misty, I Love You, Honeybear
6. Wilco, Star Wars
7. Punch Brothers, The Phosphorescent Blues
8. Godspeed You! Black Emperor, ‘Asunder, Sweet and Other Distress’
9. Oneohtrix Point Never, Garden of Delete
10. Sun Kill Moon, Universal Themes
Garrett Karrberg
Pile, You’re Better Than This
For Pile to beat out a new Local H album is nothing short of a miracle. I can’t figure out what makes this record so infectious, but I haven’t stopped listening since March. The formula is simple – heavy and catchy – but it reveals something new with each listen. Another home run for Exploding in Sound Records.
Local H, Hey, Killer
Local H released the radio hit “Bound For the Floor” almost twenty years ago, but they’ve put out one great album after another since then and the duo is far and away the best live band I’ve ever seen. Hey, Killer is the first to feature new drummer Ryan Harding, but his chemistry with guitarist/singer/sort-of bassist Scott Lucas is immediately apparent. If you like rock music at all, check this record out, dig into Local H’s back catalog, grab some earplugs, and go see them live.
Broken Water, Wrought
A mix between their hometown Olympia, WA sound and the punkier elements of Sonic Youth. Wrought is unabashedly political throughout, but closes with the gorgeous twelve-minute “Beach,” featuring legendary Lori Goldston on cello. Also, Shawn Reed from Night-People Records helped design the stunning album art.
Chastity Belt, Time to Go Home
The dual guitar lines and melodies on this album are something else. The lyrics are funny, feminist, and delivered with an emotional weight not always found on indie rock records this catchy.
Royal Headache, High
The second standout album from this Australian garage punk band. Hook follows hook for a too-brief twenty-eight minutes while lead singer Shogun’s soul-tinged vocals alternate between a forceful snarl and measured croon at just the right moments.
Jim O’Rourke, Simple Songs
This album was a revelation for me. I was only peripherally aware of Jim O’Rourke before this year, mostly through his work with Sonic Youth. This album sounds so fantastic that it sent me down the rabbit hole that is Jim O’Rourke’s solo and collaborative back catalog.
Jessica Pratt, On Your Own Love Again
On the surface, Jessica Pratt is a singer-songwriter of the 60s folk variety, but such a description sells her woefully short. Pratt distinguishes herself through her hauntingly beautiful vocals, some psychedelic influences, and melodies that reveal themselves more profoundly with each listen. This is significantly better than her 2012 debut album, which was very, very good.
Radkey, Dark Black Makeup
Debut full-length from this hardworking band of three homeschooled brothers from Missouri. Heavy, sing-along rock songs with cool guitar riffs and Danzig-inspired vocals. Wouldn’t be surprised if Radkey was soon selling out arenas.
Mount Eerie, Sauna
Phil Elverum built a magical world of organ, distortion, crashing cymbals, gentle strumming, some black metal, and the background vocals of Ashley Eriksson, Allyson Foster, Geneviève Castrée, and Paul Benson around his lyrics. Ranging from short and poppy to the ten-minute-plus drone of “Sauna” and “Spring,” this album feels like a culmination of Elverum’s music since making the shift from The Microphones to Mount Eerie.
METZ, II
I might be swayed a little too much on this one because of how incredible METZ is live. Not sure if II will stand the test of time, but I keep coming back to recall the rush of seeing these loud, noisy rock songs performed in person.
Brian McBrearty
1. Daniel Bachman, River
2. Deafheaven, New Bermuda
3. Elder, Lore
4. James Elkington & Nathan Salsburg, Ambsace
5. Kadavar, Berlin
6. Jim O’Rourke, Simple Songs
7. Natalie Prass, Natalie Prass
8. Kurt Vile, B’lieve I’m Going Down
9. Ryley Walker, Primrose Green
10. Wilco, Star Wars
Kevin O’Rourke
1. Godspeed You! Black Emperor, ‘Asunder, Sweet and Other Distress’
2. Oneohtrix Point Never, Garden of Delete
3. Battles, La Di Da Di
4. Jamie XX, In Colour
5. Deafheaven, New Bermuda
6. Bjork, Vulnicura
7. Beach House, Depression Cherry / Thank Your Lucky Stars
8. Colin Stetson and Sarah Neufeld, Never were the way she was
9. Tame Impala, Currents
10. The World Is a Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid to Die, Harmlessness
Jeff Simpson
1. Panopticon, Autumn Eternal
2. Kendrick Lamar, To Pimp a Butterfly
3. Chelsea Wolfe, Abyss
4. Kamasi Washington, The Epic
5. Sun Kil Moon, Universal Themes
6. Deafheaven, New Bermuda
7. Joanna Newsome, Diver
8. Prurient, Frozen Niagara Falls
9. Blanck Mass, Dumb Flesh
10. John Moreland, High on Tulsa Heat
Top image via the Jessica Branstetter flickr photostream, September 2015. RIP Lemmy! Long live Lemmy!












