2024 Year in Review: August

August was the month I decided I was going to take it easy and relax a bit. I’d finally finished and released Queen Ophelia’s War in June, and it was far past time for a break. Sure, I’d still focus on my writing work and whatnot, but more to the point I felt it was a good time to just enjoy the end of summer, which would end with our first away-from-home vacation in quite some time. The daily diary looks rather empty for the month, which was on purpose. Come September I’d start fresh and see how far I would get.

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Jack White, No Name, released 2 August. He just keeps getting better with each album somehow, and this was a surprise release! He’s well entrenched in his signature punk-blues hybrid and it serves him quite well here.

X, Smoke & Fiction, released 2 August. Speaking of punk, this storied LA band has chosen to bow out and dissolve gracefully with this final record that sounds both like their grittier early records and their folk-inspired latter albums.

Orville Peck, Stampede, released 2 August. The masked singer comes back with a super fun album of duets featuring Beck, Elton John, Willie Nelson, Nathaniel Rateliff and more; it’s a mix of covers and originals done in his signature wild and Elvis-twangy style.

파란노을 (Parannoul), Sky Hundred, released 3 August. This South Korean band still wears its My Bloody Valentine influences on its sleeves, blending dreamlike melodies and walls of distortion into something otherworldly. This band is always good for writing sessions!

Quivers, Oyster Cuts, released 9 August. My favorite indie band from down under comes through with an album that expands from their janglepop sound into something a bit more rough and tumble. It’s a bit like early Black Keys but at a much slower speed.

beabadoobee, This Is How Tomorrow Moves, released 9 August. Her new album somehow finds its influences in late 90s indie rock, and that’s not a bad thing.

GIFT, Illuminator, released 23 August. I’m happy to say that this here is my top album of 2024, because it fits so completely in my wheelhouse! KEXP’s morning DJ John Richards gave this one a huge push all autumn (it’s on his own top ten of the year list), and once I got it downloaded I couldn’t get enough of it. It’s a wonderful blend of crisp shoegaze, catchy indie rock, soft vocals and tight melodies that resonate perfectly for me. Every single song on this album is a banger, and it’s already claimed its spot as one of my most played albums during writing sessions this year. I highly recommend it!

The Softies, The Bed I Made, released 23 August. This long-running duo returns from an extremely long hiatus with an absolutely wonderful album of quiet twee melodies that lean more towards The Sundays than Belle & Sebastian, all with just voices and guitar. It’s an incredibly relaxing album and well worth a listen.

Chime School, The Boy Who Ran the Paisley Hotel, released 23 August. Yet another super-local band (on Slumberland, natch), this one taking its inspiration from early janglepop, evoking bands like The Three O’Clock and The Mighty Lemon Drops. It’s a fun record that captured the attention of several adoring music critics.

Cocteau Twins & Harold Budd, The Moon and the Melodies 2024 Remaster, released 23 August. You’d think this album would have been given a remaster along with the rest of the Twins’ discography back in the early aughts, but this one was curiously left out until now. This album is one of my top favorites in their catalogue and it’s always gotten significant play during writing sessions. The new remaster gives the already spacious songs even more room to breathe and wander, making the songs sound even more dreamlike.

Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Wild God, released 30 August. Cave’s new album reminds me a lot of his early 00s albums like Nocturama and Abbatoir Blues/The Lyre of Orpheus. There’s more life and energy to this record than his previous non-soundtrack releases (which kind of makes sense, considering his last few were linked to deeply traumatic personal events). While it’s not the drunken death-blues revelry of his early work, it’s more a celebration of life and survival.

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More to come with September and October!

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