Fifteen songs in alphabetical order:
"Attention" by Charlie Puth may be empty, well-crafted pop. But when you come right down to it, what well-crafted pop isn’t empty?
"Black Sambo" by Skyzoo, a paradigmatic old-school Brooklyn rapper, is a resonant highlight, brilliantly produced by !llmind, of an excellent album, In Celebration of Us.
"Boys" by Lizzo is just so silly. I hope the Scissor Sisters cover it, not that it could possibly be improved . . .
"Criss Cross" by Miles Okazaki is from Work, an astonishingly ambitious solo guitar recording of all of Thelonious Monk's compositions.
"The Games You Play" by Pusha T is based on a sample from Booker T. Averheart’s “Heart ’n Soul.” It's from Daytona, a tough-as-nails EP brilliantly produced by an idiot savant named Kanye West.
"Hunter of Soul" by Logan Richardson is anchored by Ryan Lee's jaw-dropping drumming. It should be played at near-deafening volume.
"Make Me Feel" by Janelle Monae is too derivative of Prince. But so what? It's one of several killer tracks from Dirty Computer.
"Moonlight" by XXXTentacion is hard to listen to only once. It makes me “SAD!” because X was gunned down at the age of twenty last summer. I love the way he hides the downbeat.
"Nonstop" by Drake is, unlike most of his songs, actually threatening, in a good way, in no small part because of Tay Keith’s production, with a great sample from Mack Daddy Ju’s “My Head Is Spinnin’.”
"Ofakombolo" by Jupiter & Okwess packs more adrenaline into two and a half minutes than any other song I’ve heard this year. Their album, Kin Sonic, is excellent.
"Old Town" by Say Sue Me, the best South Korean band I know, perfectly captures the feeling of being eighteen in a small town in 1989 or so.
"Seven Points" by Mark Turner and Ethan Iverson is from one of my favorite jazz records of the year, Temporary Kings. When he was in the Bad Plus, and before that, Iverson's specialty was kidding around. Here (and elsewhere, like in the Billy Hart Quartet), he shows his sensitive side.
"Tints" by Anderson .Paak with a guest spot from Kendrick Lamar is the feel-good summer-driving song of the year.
"Tyrant" by Kali Uchis, with guest vocals by Jorja Smith, is just one of a number of great songs on the addictive pop album Isolation.
"Work Out" by Chance the Rapper is my favorite Chicago song of the year (that I've heard so far, that is), and the most genuinely happy song on this list.
I'll probably post another dozen or so songs in a few weeks or months once I've had more of a chance to explore this year's music.
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