Here are the albums that teased PG editorsā ears and made our heads explode with delight! Plus, some of the most-anticipated recordingsāreal or wish-listedāof 2023.
And the winners areā¦
Jason Shadrick ā Associate Editor
Molly Tuttle & Golden Highway
Crooked Tree
It seemed like this year the āyoung lionsā of bluegrass guitar finally broke through. While Billy Strings was on his way to arena-level stardom via the jam band crowd, Molly Tuttle took a less experimental route with a dynamite new album (produced by bluegrass legend Jerry Douglas) and new band. At times her voice echoes Alison Krauss, but her playing is firmly influenced by Tony Rice, Bryan Sutton, and Doc Watson. Songs like āFlatland Girlā and āOver the Lineā are bouncing bluegrass jams that move with such a level of relaxed comfort itās not until Tuttleās break that you realize sheās straight up shredding. Thereās also a fierce and undeniable force in Tuttleās rhythm playing. At times she can play like a high-speed freight train on cruise control, but she can also dial it back without losing any intensityājust check out her incredible duet with Dan Tyminski on āSan Francisco Bay Blues.ā Itās easy to see why ripping acoustic guitar is popular again with albums like this.
Must hear tracks: āFlatland Girl,ā āDooleyās Farm,ā āGoodbye Girlā
Molly Tuttle & Golden Highway - Crooked Tree (Live at the Station Inn)
Madison Cunningham
Revealer
After Madisonās last full-length album, Who Are You Now, I was very intrigued as to how she could put a bigger spotlight on her devastatingly great playing. Thankfully, Revealer has done the jobāand then some. Cunningham combines low-tuned oddball guitars with an always-on swirly dual vibrato in the background to amazing effect. Itās a sound in which she not only feels comfortable but thrives in a way few singer/songwriters can. Her riffs and parts are surprising in a way that forces you to listen deeper each time around. The lead single, āHospital,ā has a gritty, nasty tone that is such a welcome juxtaposition against the rather pretty melody that it makes me think of the best of Elliot Smith at times. Itās obvious that her playing style isnāt an accident, but rather a well-focused and deliberate path that will inspire many young songwriters to go beyond simple strumming.
Must hear tracks: āHospital,ā āLife According to Raechel,ā āOur Rebellionā
Madison Cunningham - Life According To Raechel (Live At Sonic Ranch Big Blue)
Cardinal Black
January Came Close
About a year ago Chris Buck dropped a video debuting his new band, Cardinal Black. The tune āTell Me How It Feelsā was incredibly crafted and featured Buckās signature emotive style. Now, a year later, the bandās full-length album is out, and it delivers. The rich tones that Buck coaxes out of his Revstar are rooted in classic rock and blues, but in the context of Cardinal Black they have more textural elements than the typical pentatonic bashing found in so many blues players. āHalf Wayā sports a massive chorus that brings to mind the best power-pop tunes of the 1970s. You could see this band rocking an old-school blues club and Royal Albert Hall (which they just recently did with Peter Frampton.) Great tunes, great playing, and great tones. What else can you ask for?
Must-hear tracks: āTell Me How It Feels,ā āHalf Way,ā āWarm Loveā
Cardinal Black - Ain't My Time (Abbey Road Live Session)
Most-anticipated 2023 releases: Metallicaās (probable) return to old-school thrash, Nickel Creek, a live Julian Lage album, and at least 12 Cory Wong albums.
Tessa Jeffers ā Managing Editor
Wu-Lu
LOGGERHEAD
In the middle of his song āSouth,ā Miles Romans-Hopcraft, aka Wu-Lu, lets out a scream so guttural and jarring, you might wonder if heās okay. But itās so deliciously cathartic to the core that I understand why primal scream therapy is trending in this year of our lord 2022-almost-2023. Wu-Luās shrieky bellow will get your attention but stick around for his mad-scientist kitchen of sounds. This debut album is an arresting amalgamation of truly original inception. He filets disparate instrumentation and influences into modern hip-hop infused songs wrapped in an entrĆ©e of punk. The best part is, heās sampling himself. After recording late-night, guitar-improv jams, Wu-Lu dissects and distills them into usable musical spices to sprinkle into his songs. Iām amused, entertained, made happy by artists who construct in a way Iāve not quite experienced before, and Romans-Hopcraftās process floors me. Guess what else? Wu-Lu is even better live, in the flesh, 3D, outside the Matrix. Watch the performance video below while I go scream primally into a pillow as an ode to Wu-Lu for the drum-n-bass wonder heās done.
Must-hear tracks: āSouth,ā āBlameā
Wu-Lu - Echoes with Jehnny Beth - @ARTE Concert
Angel Olsen
Big Time
I recently read a book about poets who lived during the first half of the 20th century. It explored how word troubadours were the first rock stars, the champions of counterculture and leaders in expression arts before rock music gave way to a new generation of minstrel messengers. Angel Olsen writes songs how poets be poetāing. Itās all storytelling, but magic comes in making choices of movement, placement, adding, taking away, and, oh, the vulnerability. Making a twangy āNashville Soundā heartbreak album suits Olsenās truth-tellinā ways. A few months ago, I attended a solo acoustic performance by Olsen, where she plucked out each emotion dynamically on her strings, light touch, and with tortured spacing, hard land. She bared some soul, made it accessible, and by doing so, commanded all attention in the room, stared down hard moments, made jokes in between, and shared personal vignettes of painful and beautiful shuffling around this orb of topsoil, water, wind, and fire. This is her take on a country-fied album, but Angel is a rock star.
Must-hear tracks: āAll the Good Times,ā āGhost Onā
Angel Olsen - All The Good Times (Official Video)
Nick Millevoi ā Associate Editor
āBill Orcutt
Music for Four Guitars
The coolest, most intriguing album of guitar music Iāve heard this year is, without a doubt, Bill Orcuttās quartet for overdubbed 4-string electric guitars. Over the course of 14 tracksāeach of which comes in around a short-and-sweet two minutesāOrcutt writes in the familiar vocab of his improvised work. But here, his riffage is focused into contrapuntal cellular structures that evoke minimalism by way of composers Glenn Branca (in the overtone puree of āOr from behindā) and Louis Andriessen (in the angular dissonance of āOnly at duskā). Thereās also major-key melodic eloquence (on āAt a distanceā) that borders on Reichian, but with a raw-er, more treble-soaked tone than anyone whoās tackled the composerās āElectric Counterpointā has dared to attempt (to my knowledge, at least). Throughout the album, repeated listening reveals new shapes and structures, and I keep coming back, ready to discover more. Bonus: The digital release comes with an 84-page PDF score, hand-tabbed by forward-thinking guitar adventurer Shane Parish, so anyone can play along once they cut a couple strings off their guitar and detune.
Must-hear tracks: āOr from behind,ā āOnly at dusk,ā āAt a distanceā
Hermanos GutiƩrrez
El Bueno Y El Malo
I knew Iād love this album as soon as I saw the video for the first single, āEl Bueno Y El Malo.ā I was right, and Iāve since become a huge fan of all the Hermanosā records. These guys just have their aesthetic completely dialed in, and their songs draw from classic sources like Santo & Johnny, Neil Young, and Ennio Morricone. It helps that they recorded this one at Easy Eye Sound, but the GutiĆ©rrez brothers would sound good if they recorded on an iPhone. When I saw them live this fall in Philadelphia, I was truly blown away by the nuances in each brotherās playing, but even more by the focused energy they conjure with their playing. This is serious vibe music, fit to accompany a modern Western or a long drive on an open road.
Must-hear tracks: āEl Bueno Y El Malo,ā āThunderbird,ā āTres Hermanos (feat. Dan Auerbach)ā
Hermanos GutiƩrrez - "El Bueno Y El Malo" [Official Music Video]
Various Artists
Imaginational Anthem vol. XI: Chrome Universal - A Survey of Modern Pedal Steel
The latest in an ongoing series of well-curated comps from Tompkins Square, this one has easily become my favorite. Compiled by Nashvilleās Luke Schneider, volume XI focuses on the wide world of contemporary pedal-steel players. Each of the nine featured artists reach beyond the stratosphere to create mostly ambient explorations that challenge the common notions of what their instrument is capable of. I was drawn to this set because it includes three players whose work I greatly admire: Susan Alcorn, Rocco DeLuca, and BJ Cole. Iāve since spent time deep diving through the works of every player on the album, getting to know and love each of their distinct voices. Much more than a great playlist that serves as a strong introduction to each steeler (which, of course, it is), I keep thinking of this record as a single work, which is probably as big an endorsement of Schneiderās curation as I can imagine.
Must-hear tracks: āAn Ode to Dungenessā by Spencer Cullum, āLysglimtā by Maggie Bjorklund, āGilmor Blueā by Susan Alcorn
Lysglimt - Maggie Bjorklund
Charles Saufley ā Gear Editor
āNecronomicon
Tips zum Selbstmord
I burn out on guitar rock pretty easily these days. That doesnāt, however, mean I need the adrenaline rush it provides any less. In these moments, I tend to look to primal sources. Thankfully, my buddy Ben tipped me to this 50th anniversary reissue of the stupidly rare Tips zum Selbstmord, a lost masterwork of brilliant-to-demented German prog/psych-punk hybridization. Tipsā¦ is pretty intense at times. Well, most of the time. There are traces of Deep Purple, Pink Floyd, Iron Butterfly, maybe even some Stooges and fellow heavy Krautrock freak vanguards like Guru Guru and Amon Duul II. (Necronomicon also share AD IIās affinity for unexpected, inexplicable bursts of distinctly untrained, quasi-operatic vocals.) But while Necronomicon clearly worked hard in the practice room, and gave these sprawling arrangements much thought, there is an atavistic edge and immediacy here that suggests a band creeping forth from primordial muck. Best of all, it feels utterly, amazingly lacking in self-awarenessāa thrilling thing to hear in an era of relentless, calculated self-presentation.
Necronomicon = Tips Zum Selbstmord - 1972 - (Full Album)
Misha Panfilov
The Sea Will Outlive Us All
The cover of The Sea Will Outlive Us All, pays homage to private press LPs of the late ā60s and early ā70s. In some ways, Estonian multi-instrumentalist Misha Panfilov wears musical influences from that period on his sleeve too. But while itās easy to hear trace elements of Franco/Italian soundtrack gems and circa-ā69 Pink Floyd, these instrumental meditations exist quite outside of time. And like a lot of music I cherish, they suggest utopian possibilities, future/past fusions uncolored by cynicism, and endlessly unfolding days when summer looms ever closer.
Misha Panfilov - The Sea Will Outlive Us All (Full Album 2022)
Ted Drozdowski ā Editorial Director
āThe Linda Lindas
Growing Up
Even Iām shocked that my favorite album of the year is by four teenaged girls from Los Angeles. But I love this record! Bela Salazar and Lucia de la Garza slam down a wall of guitars that resonates between the Ramones and epic ā90s alt-rock. All four Lindas sing killer harmony, and theyāve got great hooks and melodies in their pockets. And listening to their lyrics about the trials and trips of young life makes me wish I was as smart and self-aware as they are when I was their age. Oh, and theyāre tough onstage, too. Check out the performance video of their song āRacist, Sexist Boyā ā¦ at the L.A. Public Library, of all places. The icing for me was interviewing Salazar and de la Garza for our ā10 Young Guitar Players to Watchā feature in the November PG. They were funny, poised, and candid about just how much they didnāt know about playing guitarāand that takes way more confidence than I had as a teenager. In todayās music, the Linda Lindas are the cool kids.
Must hear tracks: āGrowing Up,ā āTalking to Myself,ā Racist, Sexist Boy,ā and āNino.ā
The Linda Lindas - "Growing Up"
Valerie June
Under Cover
Sure, itās a covers album, but I could listen to Valerie June sing a menu and be entirely satisfiedāespecially if she was able to layer her vocals and use reverb the way she does here as co-producer with Jack Splash, whose own credits run deep in the contemporary R&B world. The spare-to-perfection instrumentation adds the right emotional underpinning, too. She turns great songs by Nick Drake (āPink Moonā), Nick Cave (āInto My Armsā), John Lennon (āImagineā), Mazzy Star (āFade Into Youā), Joe South (āDonāt It Make You Want To Go Homeā), and others into magic carpet rides. I find that irresistible.
Must-hear tracks: āFade Into You,ā āPink Moon,ā āImagineā
Valerie June - Fade Into You
Charlie Musselwhite
Mississippi Son
When I profiled this old lion of the blues in PG over the summer, in a piece titled āCharlie Musselwhite Goes Back to the Delta,ā I described this album as ābeautiful as a fresh magnolia blossom with hints of dust on its petals.ā But it also contains the mysticism of the greatest of Mississippiās traditional musicāpartly gothic, reflective of the history and the soil it took place upon, echoing with the voices of the past that still resonateāparticularly in Musselwhiteās head and heartālike Big Joe Williams and John Lee Hooker. Fans of the harmonica virtuoso have known of his estimable skill at Delta-style country blues guitar for ages, but in more than a half-century of recording heās not revealed it until this album. Ricocheting between original songs and durable classics, Musselwhite sounds like an oracleāespecially on the talking blues āThe Dark,ā a Guy Clark number. His messageāto paraphrase Sam Phillips: This is music that comes from a place where the soul of a man or woman never dies.
Must-hear tracks: āThe Dark,ā āPea Vine Blues,ā āCrawling Kingsnakeā
The Dark
Most-anticipated 2023 releases: Hummmm, maybe that Sonny Sharrock tribute album Carlos Santana has been putting together? And the new Messthetics project, plus more work by Mike Baggetta, Bill Frisell, and PJ Harvey. AndāI know, I ask every yearānew music by Tom Waits? More gems from Dan Auerbachās trove of unreleased historic live blues recordings would also be welcome. And Dan, isnāt it time to produce an album for Kenny Brown? And finally, that new Metallica album is on the way! Thank you, Santa.
The hippie-cowboy pedal steeler for Orville Peck and Margo Price breaks out modulation mutators and synth stomps for a solo mission full of ethereal bends and sublime swells combining cosmic country and ambient new wave.
Facing a mandatory shelter-in ordinance to limit the spread of COVID-19, PG enacted a hybrid approach to filming and producing Rig Rundowns. This is the eighth video in that format, and we stand behind the final product.
While growing up in Ohio, Luke Schneider was raised on California country-rock (Neil Young, Crosby Stills & Nash, Linda Ronstadt, the Eagles) before discovering early-ā90s grunge. Those two influences (helped by the fact that Neil Young had a foot in both camps) were a big reason that 11-year-old Luke Schneider scored his first guitar so he could start rockinā in the free world. Even at that pre-teen point, he knew that the six strings on āOld Blackā werenāt his true calling. He wanted to cry and moan like Neil Youngās pedal-steel guitarist Ben Keith, but it would take over 10 years before he landed his first rideāa mid-ā70s MSA doubleneck pedal-steel. (He paid for it from his bellhop tips he got during the 2001 Summer NAMM show.)
Luke Schneider has played alongside Margo Price, Orville Peck, Caitlin Rose, William Tyler, and others. He recently made the transition to solo artist and recorded an instrumental album (Altar of Harmony via Third Man Records) that exclusively uses his 1967 Emmons āpush-pullā pedal-steel guitar. The music created by the doubleneck steel combines familiar cries of Floyd, Eno, Lanois, Parsons, Byrds, and, of course, Ben Keith. The result is a seamless wander through meditative moods and celestial calmness creating the perfect contemplative soundtrack.
Schneider welcomes PGās Chris Kies into his jam space for an enlightening conversation that covers his 20-year arc behind the pedal-steel desk, the musical journey that led him to combining ā70s outlaw country with ambient shoegaze on pedal steel, and details his use of digital synth pedals through the traditional country instrument.