Slayyyter's new album WOR$T GIRL IN AMERICA was released in late March, and it's a grimy electronic masterpiece. This album is a clear contender for our #Wicked25 this year.
Today's song - co-written by Slayyyter and her producers - is called by her "the best song I've ever written." It makes sense. It's dark and inventive.... and also, she's literally shooting a Chanel handbag in this video.
Afrika Bambaataa was a complicated man with a complicated history - and not always a good one. Several CREDIBLE child sexual abuse allegations were definitely part of his history, and that's horrendous. Because of that, I almost didn't post this one.
What is undeniable is that he was one of the people who started hip-hop house parties in the 1970s. So, with his passing, a pioneering and very dark portion of hip-hop history closes. This 1982 single was his only appearance on the Billboard Hot 100, and the song is seen as one of the most influential hip hop songs of all time.
Normally, I would say that the artist who passed would be missed, but in this case, I won't be saying that. I will say that he leaves behind some influential music. That's all I am going to say.
I made a promise - a guarantee - that all the artists who had not been posted about on #WickedGP that were part of the Wicked 25 would get a post if they had not.
It took me until April, but here's the last one. Tyler Childers's album Snipe Hunter was a masterpiece of country music. Here's what one critic had to say about it:
"Snipe Hunter is Tyler Childers going all‑in on weird spiritual country: talking to gods, playing with garage rock and Phil Spector (and Rick Rubin) sounds, and still somehow landing back in the holler. It’s messy and brave in a way major‑label country almost never is. This is the album I absolutely expected to dislike and almost didn't listen to - and yet, here we are, talking about it, because it is that undeniably good." - Literally me.
And it is that good. This song - which is about an older woman and not a Finger Lake (and when you hear the song, New Yorkers, you are going to be screaming that he's pronouncing "Oneida" wrong) - is a beautiful masterpiece that is a lot of the reason the album made my list.
I wish all country music sounded like this. The whole album is sincerely incredibly good, and I stand by its placement on my list, even as I am actively rethinking other entries.
It's an official LIVE video, but trust me. This is what it sounds like on the record.
He doesn't need a full band to show you how personal and heartfelt this song really is, as he has done live.
I don't take many trips back to the 1980s, but in this caex of Fairport Convention) and Linda Thompson - a husband-and-wife duo - had been married for nine years and had released five albums of varying acclaim and success. They had been dropped by Gerry Rafferty, who had financed recordings that generated no interest. Their marriage was struggling - and Linda was pregnant.
So when Joe Boyd signed them to his Hannibal Records, he was taking a serious risk. What he got was a masterpiece of an album that ended up being a pretty big hit, 1982's Shoot Out The Lights. It would be the duo's final album (and their marriage would be over by the time of the album's releasae), but it would reestablish Richard as a songwriting force.
The title song is a masterclass in guitar-driven emotional rock music.
Just because the marriage broke up does not mean Richard did not perform his songs.
By the way, Richard and Linda are both still with us, and Richard even sometimes still performs, as he did in 2014 in this clip.
So, we talk a lot on here about a lot of those big music prizes. From the Mercury Prize, for the UK, to Polaris for Canada, to the Australian Music Prize, there a lot of them.
One I have not talked about much is the Premio Ruido, or the "Noise Prize", given to Spanish artists. shego - named after a character from the TV show Kim Possible, of all places, is a band that is a of women from Madrid who were on the shortlist for the 2025 version of that prize.
Their album No lo volveré a hacer is absolutely amazing, even though it is almost entirely in Spanish - which you won't notice or care about. It is highly recommended and worth a listen!
Raye co-wrote this song with long-time collaborator Mike Sabath, and released as the first single of her 2nd album, This Music May Contain Hope, which has been universally praised and I need to go listen to.
No, she isn't married.
And no, she's not wearing shoes, either. This is something Raye often does live.
The song is currently a top 20 song in the US, and shows no signs of slowing - and is an even bigger hit worldwide.
I wasn't kidding about the barefoot thing. Her performance at Glastonbury last year was similarly sans shoes.
And when she appeared on Jennifer Hudson's show, she was similarly barefoot.
We're not exactly running out of ideas, not by a long shot.
But this song got turfed to Totally Covered..... because it IS a cover, of a song by Ani DiFranco. And yes, those two posts were published on the same day (except I just updated the Ani post).
And it shouldn't have been, because Alana Davis turned the song into something Ani DiFranco did not. And Elektra Records pushed Davis into recording the song.... and to making lyrical changes - something that made both Davis and DiFranco initially uncomfortable, although both came to terms with it. Record companies, right?
But anyway, this song isn't exactly a cover anymore. This version has a chorus - uncredited to but written by Davis. It is its own thing... and that's why it's getting its due here.
Davis is a fantastic performer - STILL - but I chose her Conan performance from 1998 because it showcases her voice so perfectly.