Nice to have put the cat among the proverbial pigeons and provoke a little discussion (which was my intent, truth be told). I'll quickly leave my thoughts in relation to the albums mentioned to "show my working" a bit:
Sleepytime Gorilla Museum - of the Last Human Being
I wish I knew why this band never clicked for me, as I love Idiot Flesh. But none of their three original albums quite resonated with me as I felt they should so I have been hesitant to give this one ago. Mind you, that was a long time ago. I probably do owe it a spin or two.
Plantoid - Terrapath
Pretty sure I was the first person to mention it on this forum! Definitely a highlight, and the closest to something that's felt fresh and new to me this year. But I feel like it's in the "promising debut" camp rather than a start-to-finish banger. Very excited to see where they go from here.
IZZ - Collapse the Wave
This didn't grab me after two spins. I've dipped a toe into a couple of their previous albums and it's always felt a bit in-one-ear-out-the-other. That's probably unfair. Maybe spin 3 will do the trick.
Avalanche Kaito - Talitakum
New to me. That's going on tomorrow's to do list.
Present - this is NOT the end
I keep forgetting this is out. I've not heard it yet because it's not available to stream on Bandcamp or the dreaded Spotify. No excuse, really. I'll pony up for it when payday rolls around.
Tom Penaguin - s/t
This is a very good album, no question, but as with Zopp's debut it's so precise in its evocation of the classic Canterbury sound that it feels almost like an exercise in historical re-enactment. Zopp mixed things up a bit and brought in some more contemporary influences for their second album so I'm hoping Tom P can do the same.
I guess what I'm driving at is that, compared to recent years I just haven't found "that one album" yet. 2021 gave me Shamblemaths 2, 2022 had Toehider's I Have Little to No Memory of these Memories, 2023 had Prima Materia by Agusa, Lars Fredrik Frřislie's solo album, The Chronicles of Father Robin and Sonar and David Torn's Three Movements (their best, IMO). I've heard a lot of music that's impressed me this year, but none that have electrified me.
As you all say, this is of course 100% subjective. I do not believe that any art can be "objectively" good or bad. But my experience of 2024 thus far has just felt comparatively underwhelming. Still, as I say, we still have a few months to go yet...
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