Solange, Lana Del Rey, 'Old Town Road' among 2019's best in music - Los Angeles Times
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Best albums and songs of 2019: Solange, Lana Del Rey and the miracle that is ‘Old Town Road’

The best albums and songs of 2019
(Paul Gonzales / Los Angeles Times)
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For an almost-five-month stretch this year, no musician over the age of 22 could lay claim to the top spot on Billboard’s Hot 100 — one reason it’s easy to view pop right now as a young person’s game. But if streaming has shortened the gap between starting out and breaking through, it’s also encouraged older artists to think deep and stretch out. The best albums and songs of 2019 explored ideas of love and war and family and anxiety in all the different ways we experience them: as an instant sensation, as a daily reality, as a long-term consequence.

BEST ALBUMS

1. Solange, “When I Get Home” (Columbia)
What does it mean to belong? And what threatens a sense of belonging once attained? In a year of kids in cages and black people shot by police in their homes, nobody pondered these questions harder than the Houston-born Solange did on this gorgeous and wrenching tribute to the place that shaped her.

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2. Lana Del Rey, “Norman F— Rockwell!” (Interscope)
Speaking of places: A style-obsessed singer long haunted by California’s myths finally digs beneath the surface and discovers something like hope. If the culture is lit, as Del Rey sings in “The Greatest,” it’s lit from within.

3. Billie Eilish, “When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?” (Darkroom/Interscope)
At 17, Eilish is too young to have bought into the musty teen-pop orthodoxies about good girls and bad guys. But the voice that drives her effortlessly modern debut is an old-fashioned glory.

4. Jon Pardi, “Heartache Medication” (Capitol Nashville)
With stupid-brilliant wordplay and tempos as stiff as a favorite bartender’s drinks, “Heartache Medication” is boot-scooting country music the way it used to be made — y’know, way back in 1991.

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5. Clairo, “Immunity” (Fader)
This Gen Z singer-songwriter went viral in 2017 with a rinky-dink indie-pop confessional laid down on a laptop in her bedroom. Two years (and tens of millions of YouTube plays) later, Clairo’s music still feels like privileged information.

6. Vampire Weekend, “Father of the Bride” (Columbia)
The band’s most emotionally expansive album — inspired, in part, by frontman Ezra Koenig’s moving to Los Angeles and becoming a dad — is also somehow its most relaxed, with grooves made for jamming and a door wide open to guests.

7. Tyler, the Creator, “Igor” (Columbia)
Setting his conflicted thoughts about love against vivid jump-cut beats he produced himself, the reliable hip-hop rabble-rouser goes full-on left-field R&B auteur.

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8. Purple Mountains, “Purple Mountains” (Drag City)
Knowing that David Berman died by suicide not long after releasing this masterfully composed folk-rock album makes it impossible not to flinch when he sings, “I’m barely hanging on,” in a song called “All My Happiness Is Gone.” What’s even harder is hearing him describe a simple, insufficient pleasure in “Margaritas at the Mall.”

9. Samantha Sidley, “Interior Person” (Release Me)
Something you might not have realized you needed (though this L.A. native certainly knew she did): a sweet, funny, tastefully arranged vocal-jazz disc about same-sex romance.

10. Taylor Swift, “Lover” (Republic)
Arguably lost in all the talk about her contract disputes and her willingness to adapt to the streaming era is this: Swift remains such a talented record maker that among the dozen or so successes on this strategically overstuffed effort is a heavy-breathing slow jam (!) complete with saxophone solo (!!).

Honorable mentions:

Summer Walker, “Over It” (LVRN/Interscope)
Cuco, “Para Mi” (Interscope)
Kanye West, “Jesus Is King” (Def Jam)
Rex Orange County, “Pony” (RCA)
Ariana Grande, “Thank U, Next” (Republic)

BEST SONGS

1. Lil Nas X featuring Billy Ray Cyrus, “Old Town Road” (Columbia)
A miracle of pop ingenuity that led to a miracle of pop democracy.

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2. 100 gecs, “Money Machine” (Dog Show)
When you stare at the internet, the internet stares back.

3. Lizzo, “Juice” (Atlantic)
Exuberance bottled as neatly as the booze Lizzo advises us to blame.

4. Beyoncé, Jay-Z and Childish Gambino featuring Oumou Sangaré, “Mood 4 Eva” (Parkwood/Columbia)
From Beyoncé’s “Lion King” tie-in, an all-time flex worthy of Disney’s largesse.

5. DaBaby, “Suge” (Interscope)
Pure attitude.

6. Bruce Springsteen, “Tucson Train” (Columbia)
Pure dad-itude.

7. Lil Tecca, “Ransom” (Republic)
Hip-hop braggadocio for the mean streets of Minecraft.

8. Post Malone featuring Ozzy Osbourne and Travis Scott, “Take What You Want” (Republic)
Mama, the power ballad has come home.

9. The Highwomen, “Crowded Table” (Elektra)
A kindly recipe for radical institutional change.

10. Lewis Capaldi, “Someone You Loved” (Capitol)
The someone is Adele.

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