Wednesday, March 12, 2025, 9:53AM |  39°
MENU
Advertisement
Baltimore's Turnstile offered up the Album of the Year in 2021.
1
MORE

The 10 best albums of 2021, where Turnstile reigns

Jimmy Fontaine

The 10 best albums of 2021, where Turnstile reigns

One thing about pandemics: You figure you’re going to get some great albums out of it. Not because artists are writing about PCR tests and toilet-paper shortages. There wasn’t much of that, that I heard, at least.

What the pandemic did was give artists time to dream and reflect, followed by ample time in the studio to bring the work to life.

A lot of my favorite albums this year blurred genre lines, keeping us on edge for what is coming next.

Advertisement

1. Turnstile, “Glow On”: If Jane’s Addiction had emerged 30 years later, it may have sounded like this third album from the aptly named Baltimore band that blasts through hardcore punk, metal and electronic with the same urgency. You never know what’s coming next through the turnstile and while that is sometimes a recipe for disaster, Turnstile and producer Mike Elizondo keep it thrilling and cohesive.

The Rolling Stones at Heinz Field offer the best Pittsburgh-area concert of the year.
Scott Mervis
The Rolling Stones top the list of the 10 best concerts of 2021

2. St. Vincent, “Daddy’s Home”: The art-rock sensation from Texas describes her sixth album as “the sound of being down and out downtown in New York, 1973.” It’s the music she listened to with her father, whose release from prison (for white-collar financial crimes) further prompted the confessional tone of the record. With colorings of Bowie, Pink Floyd, the Velvets and Steely Dan, she paints a portrait of a woman struggling in the face of societal pressures.

Advertisement

3. Dry Cleaning, “New Long Leg”: This London post-rock band doesn’t have a singer. It has a narrator, in visual artist Florence Shaw, who auditioned for the band reading from Michael Bernard Loggins’ book “Fears Of Your Life.” The result is much like those moments when Kim Gordon talks seductively over Sonic Youth’s grind and swirl of guitars, only in this case, it goes on for 42 minutes. Bits and fragments leap out, both dark and comical, but it’s so mesmerizing, what she’s saying barely matters. This is the aural equivalent of a Warhol Museum exhibition. (Bonus points: If you google “Dry Cleaning,” you’ll find the nearest shops in your area.)

4. Tyler, the Creator, “CALL ME IF YOU GET LOST”: The Odd Future oddball follows his Grammy-winning rap album “Igor” by pushing the boundaries again with this densely layered homage to mixtapes that moves through hip-hop, R&B, funk and synth-pop with DJ Drama, Lil Wayne, Lil Uzi Vert, Pharrell Williams, Jamie xx and his own mama among those jumping in. Tyler, adopting the alias of Tyler Baudelaire, a nod to the French poet, tackles his own celebrity and controversies, before laying it all out there about a questionable affair on the album’s most revealing song “Wilshire,” where he offers, “I’m a bad person/I had no ill intentions though.” As he says, “It’s just another chapter in the book.” At times, I did get lost, but the Creator didn’t answer.

5. Little Simz, “Sometimes I Might Be Introvert”: For a sometimes introvert, Little Simz takes some bold strokes, like starting this fourth album with what sounds like an orchestral Bond theme. From there, the fourth album from the Mercury Prize-nominated British-Nigerian rapper with the twisting wordplay keeps the sonic thrills going for the better part of its 19-song, 65-minute runtime. The warm analog instrumentation, shifting styles and playful self-exploration make it a journey worth taking.

From L-R: Kendall Roy (Jeremy Strong), Shiv Roy (Sarah Snook) and Roman Roy (Kieran Culkin) appear in this scene from season three of the HBO series "Succession."
Joshua Axelrod
The 10 best TV shows of 2021

6. Japanese Breakfast, “Jubilee”: The third album from Korean-American indie-rocker Michelle Zauner is a companion piece to “Crying in H Mart,” her best-selling memoir grieving the death of her mother. It’s hard not to think of Harriet Wheeler, of The Sundays, when you hear the Philly artist’s airy vocals and percolating melodies offset by her introspective writing.

7. Olivia Rodrigo, “Sour”: Beginning with her breakout, “Driver’s License,” the 28-year-old Disney star from “High School Musical: The Musical: The Series” took over the Lorde role of spokesperson for teen angst. Leaning on such influences as No Doubt and the White Stripes, she turns in a raging pop-punkish debut that crackles with energy.

8. Silk Sonic, “An Evening with Silk Sonic”: “Ladies, don’t be afraid to make your way to the stage,” Bootsy Collins, “the blaster of the universe” tells us in the intro. Indeed. Bruno Mars and Anderson .Paak are about to lay some grooves on you. The duo puts substantial talents together for this valentine to old-school ‘70s R&B, capturing the magic of Motown and Philly soul. “​​We’re making music to make women feel good and make people dance, and that’s it,” Paak told Rolling Stone (quoting Mars).They pulled it off on this joyfully grooving debut project with some of the sweetest falsettos you’ll ever hear.

9. Valerie June, “The Moon and Stars: Prescriptions for Dreamers”: “Beguiling” is the word that keeps popping up to describe the otherworldly voice of this Brooklyn-by-way-of-Memphis singer who sounds like nobody else ever. Having worked with Dan Auerbach of The Black Keys and Matt Marinelli (Norah Jones) on previous albums, she now hooks up with Jack Splash (Kendrick Lamar, Alicia Keys) for this celestial soul trip that delivers on the promise of the title.

10. Neil Young and Crazy Horse, “Barn”: Neil, in his Colorado barn, with Old Black, the boys from Crazy Horse and no pressing agenda. All they have to do is plug in and rip. Sometimes, it’s clunky. Sometimes, it’s sublime. In any case, it’s hard to believe this creature comfort is still available to us all these decades later.

First Published: December 21, 2021, 4:04 p.m.

RELATED
From L-R: Beck Bennett as Eric, Danny McBride as Rick Mitchell, Abbi Jacobson as Katie Mitchell, Maya Rudolph as Linda Mitchell" Mike Rianda as Aaron Mitchell, Doug the Pug as Monchi and Fred Armisen as Deborahbot 5000" vamp in this scene from the Netflix film "The Mitchells vs. the Machines."
Joshua Axelrod
The 10 best movies of 2021
SHOW COMMENTS (0)  
Join the Conversation
Commenting policy | How to Report Abuse
If you would like your comment to be considered for a published letter to the editor, please send it to letters@post-gazette.com. Letters must be under 250 words and may be edited for length and clarity.
Partners
Advertisement
Philadelphia Eagles running back Kenneth Gainwell (14) is tackled by Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker Patrick Queen (6) during the second half of an NFL football game Sunday, Dec. 15, 2024, in Philadelphia.
1
sports
Report: Steelers sign RB Kenneth Gainwell to one-year deal
New York Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers (8) looks on next to head coach Robert Saleh during an NFL football game against the New York Giants, Saturday, Aug. 26, 2023 in East Rutherford, N.J. Jets won 32-24.
2
sports
Free agency waiting game between Steelers, Aaron Rodgers presses on
Pitt head coach Jeff Capel, left, watches the final moments of an NCAA college basketball game against North Carolina, Saturday, Feb. 8, 2025, in Chapel Hill, N.C.
3
sports
Paul Zeise: Pitt got robbed against Notre Dame, but Jeff Capel's program has much bigger issues to address
Aaron Stauber, president of New Jersey-based Rugby Realty, welcomed media into One Oxford Centre, which his company purchased last week with plans to revitalize, on Tuesday, March 11, 2025, in Downtown.
4
business
Meet Downtown's largest private property owner — and his plans to remake One Oxford Centre
Gov. Josh Shapiro speaks to a crowd of employees at Voith Hydro in York County on Tuesday.
5
news
Gov. Shapiro calls for Pa. lawmakers to act on his energy proposals
Baltimore's Turnstile offered up the Album of the Year in 2021.  (Jimmy Fontaine)
Jimmy Fontaine
Advertisement
LATEST ae
Advertisement
TOP
Email a Story