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Current DJ: Sarah Spencer
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Throughout December, CHIRP Radio presents its volunteers’ top albums of 2023. Our next list is from DJ and Manager of Record Donations Joe Held (Rebellious Jukebox).
Throughout December, CHIRP Radio presents its volunteers’ top albums of 2023. Our next list is from DJ & Production Director Ninja.
Highlights include "Tux (Your Body Fills Me, Boo) - an homage to the tuxedo; and "So Typically Now," which was released as an advance single and made my top singles list of last year. The rest of the album fills out nicely, with a slow-bop "Only Daedalus" leading off the whole thing. Lot of retro here, but I like this direction for Meg Remy.
Throughout December, CHIRP Radio presents its volunteers’ top albums of 2023. Our next list is from DJ Tony Breed.
Boy, it’s been a year, hasn’t it? A year of what my boss keeps calling “macroeconomic conditions”, like a man gesturing vaguely at a beat-up car. But the music has been good! Real good. This summer there was one song I kept hearing, a song that clearly resonated with a lot of our DJs. This is my pick for song of the year: “Quit” by Velvet Vision. It’s enormously catchy, and speaks to disaffected workers everywhere. I remember being in a Zoom meeting with my team; one employee was talking about feeling really defeated, and there, on the radio in the room behind me, was this song. Do I want to quit my job? Maybe I want to quit my job? Can we please do a 4-day workweek?? Here are my top 10 albums, the absolute best of the best, in my estimation:
“This album is so good,” I keep thinking to myself while listening to Sen Morimoto’s third album Diagnosis. The complex musical fusion is hard to put a label on; it probably owes the most to jazz, while not really being a jazz album. The influence of hip hop is also there, as are indie pop and post punk, but it’s not really any one of those things. What it is, is solid, layered, and varied, from the angry politics of “Diagnosis” to the quiet beauty of “Forsythia (????????)”. Give it another listen. I can’t stop playing it.
Throughout December, CHIRP Radio presents its volunteers’ top albums of 2023. Our next list is from DJ & Special Events Co-Director Sarah Spencer.
2023 was another great year for music. When it comes time for me to decide my top 10 list, that fact becomes a bit of a challenge. And it's a great challenge to have! My approach this year was to go with the records that a) I played the most, and b) the records that really stayed with me this year. It's in that spirit that I present my top ten albums of 2023:
If I'm going to choose my top record, it's got to be the one that I played the most this year. I would be embarrassed to venture a guess as to how many spins I’ve given this LP so far. It’s a masterpiece six years in the making: a collaboration with DJ Koze that will undoubtedly influence the genre for years to come. I’ve been following Róisín Murphy‘s career for the better part of the last 25 years and this is without a doubt her best record. She’s at the top of her musical game. For a woman who just turned 50 this year, that’s an incredible achievement. That’s not to say, this album is without its problems, and unfortunately, those have nothing to do with the music. I’ll leave it to you to read the background, but suffice to say as a result you won’t find this record on a lot of top 10 lists this year. While I don’t share her opinion, Róisín's comments reveal her stance on a topic of active debate in her home country of Ireland; while controversial, the comments were not hateful in nature. At a time when Pablo Picasso has a current exhibit at the Art Institute, and a newly finished John Lennon song is all the rage, it feels entirely inappropriate and over-the-top to censor Róisín Murphy.
Throughout December, CHIRP Radio presents its volunteers’ top albums of 2023. Our next list is from Assistant Music Director Matthew Jaccarino.