Warm Visions’ Top 50 Albums of 2023

Greetings, dear readers of Warm Visions, and welcome to my favorite albums of 2023 post. Every year it becomes more apparent that ranking art is a bad thing, but let’s make that only apply to conglomerates of many writers, that are pooling their thoughts and are more widely beloved. We are all unique in our desires and pleasures – there’s no way to clump all of us together and objectively say what music is the best or not.

That is, until my “Warm Visions”™® come into play. I am one person, but I have stalked the internet high and low to find only the best records available, and have thusly presented them to you here. No reason to debate me when perfection is already achieved: this list is the premier collection of ranked music of 2023 available, and my choices are 100% correct. In seriousness though, I did enjoy a good chunk of records this year, and here are 50 of my favorites.

Like previous years, I’ve selected ten honorable mentions and then written blurbs + “Warm Visions descriptions” for the following 50 records, which are arranged from #50 to #1. This is a snapshot of how I’m feeling now, but everyone knows this will shift around A TON even by January. Heck I’m changing the order of this thing the day it got posted. I’m being for real! I’ll get more into my thoughts on music as a whole in 2023 in my Retrospective post coming at the top of 2024, so I won’t bore you with too many more of my opinions right now. In the meantime, check out my list below, listen to some records you hadn’t given time to before and support some artists to make spirits bright (Bandcamp streams below + album art linked with their pages as well). No EPs list this year, but Songs + Concerts coming soon. Happy Best of 2023 season!


HONORABLE MENTIONS:

  • A.S.O.a.s.o.
  • BLUE LAKESun Arcs
  • DADÁ JOÃOZINHO – tds bem global
  • FOANSSelected Classics
  • M. SAGE & ZANDER RAYMONDParayellowgram
  • NEWJEANSGet Up EP
  • OVERMONOGood Lies
  • PAUL ST. HILAIRETikiman Vol. 1
  • TINARIWENAmatssou
  • VIRGINIA ASTLEYThe Singing Places

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Recommended Albums: November 2023

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November 2023 came and went, leaving behind some stellar records that easily found their way onto my Best Albums of 2023 list, which should be coming in the next few weeks now that I have this finished. I’m still going through a bunch of records that I missed from the year, but I’d say it’s pretty solidified.

Either way, hope you enjoy this last gasp of Recommended Albums for 2023. I even listed more than 10! Feeling generous out here!

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Recommended Albums: October 2023

Getting this out basically in December – no need to include descriptions. These are good albums, you’ll be seeing a few of them in my Top 50 of 2023, whenever that comes. Thanks for reading.

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Playlist: Winter Jacket Love Letter – Fool’s Nostalgia

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’95 sedan heat, carpet seats crumbs embedded, pilling flannel under dad’s old coat, arm cast signed xoxo, flattened field, glazed pewter skies, 3pm twilight, turnpike cowboy, fool’s nostalgia, snare shot to heaven, a letter you tucked away from another season.


It’s been a minute, but I felt the inspiration to craft another playlist, pulling from the touches of winter-adjacent autumn and the nostalgia that comes with it, along with three particular songs in the following playlist. In November 2021 I visited my home state of Michigan to visit two family member in the hospital. Alone in my hometown for the first time in 10 years, with a rental car to boot, I drove all over my memory’s landmarks as they were basked in that luscious, midwest fall glow. One of the songs that came on my shuffle was Black Marble’s “Say It First”, and the pairing of listening to this song while driving around my quaint past hometown has stuck with me ever since.

The other two tracks that gave me inspiration were Molly Nilsson’s “1995”, which was an obvious source of past mining thanks to its title and obvious throwback sound. The other was CCFX’s “The One To Wait”, which upon listening explicitly conjures ripe nostalgia of being in friends’ hand-me-down cars in November / December, the heat blaring, the skies fading quick after school lets out, the romance and drama of the holidays swirling, the lackadaisical attitude around responsibilities with winter breaks looming. At the same time though for me, it puts false images in my head of cinematic friend groups of the past doing the exact same thing in suburban, semi-converted rural areas across North America over a stretch of time, let’s say 1986 to 2002. Kids bringing camcorders to school to not only show off their exciting new tech, but to document the best days of their lives. Afternoons just spent driving along the never-ending backroads by the cemetery, or by the trampled corn field, defunct for the winter, or through the four-corner downtown. Putting on their winter coats after a season of hibernation, only to find a love note that a friend had passed them in the early spring of that year, forgotten, wrinkled. Or maybe even a note that was meant to be given, but shrunk away just in the last moment, and then rediscovered. Or perhaps just a love letter to the coats that return to comfort us every year.

With that, I was bound to make a collection of songs with obvious 80s/90s nostalgia production, focusing on synth/drum machine/bass/guitar combos that ` dark, but not too dark you lose hope for the future. Some of the songs lean a bit too hard into the dance / goth portion, but imagine this as a CD (or tape, hey!) you’d find in a car from the era. A windshield-shaped window into an exhibit on ennui, on drama, on being drunk on romance, seeped into every bursting pore. Listen & check the track list below.

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Recommended Albums: September 2023

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Holy smokes. New music in 2023 had been pretty slow so far, in my opinion. Then September 2023 happened and I had to put 17 albums in my Recommended Albums post. You read that right: 17 albums are listed below. The record for the longest Recommended Albums post is from May 2016, where I listed 23 individual projects. That was excessive and I won’t ever do that again. But to be real for a second: that crazy, 12+ number hasn’t happened in a while – years, even! In September we were gifted examples of raucous 90s+00s rock, brilliant pop, devastating hip hop, dreamy bliss, dub reggae, an incredible remix and so much more. It’s a whole cornucopia of goodness, and there are even other high-profile releases I didn’t care for that are missing! Cmon now folks, there’s too much good new music out there!

None of these records are currently sticking their hand out and screaming as my top favorite release of the year. It’s surely a strong showing though, and they all will be bringing me happiness throughout the rest of 2023 and beyond.

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Recommended Albums: August 2023

Hey and welcome. Apologies for the massive wait for August albums. It’s basically October. I went on vacation for a week earlier in the month. The weeks have tended to melt by without much hubbub, making me completely lost track of time. But we’re still here, keeping the Recommended Albums streak up. In my defense, it feels as though August has always been a slow month for new releases. Looking through old Recommended Albums posts, notable August releases (for me) include Kornel Kovacs’ The Bells (2016), Esther Rose’s You Made It This Far (2019), Indigo De Souza’s Every Shape You Take (2021) and Marci’s self-titled debut (2022). One year I’ve purposely excluded until now is 2018, which easily takes “Best Recommended Albums of August” post, featuring The Beths’ Future Me Hates Me, Mitski’s Be The Cowboy, Tirzah’s Devotion, and more. Three albums featured in my Best Albums of the 2010s list. Notable to say the least! We’ll be seeing more of Tirzah in September!

Do any of the records from August 2023 have a shot to make my Best Albums of the 2020s list? We’ll have to see, only time will tell. But nah, probably not, if we’re being honest. There are some cool records, don’t get me wrong. Lots of new-to-me names (Kibi James, Mary Jane Dunphe (PS: the lead singer of CCFX!!), Edsel Axle (PS: the solo guitar project of Rosali!)) + some real freaky shit (dadá Joãozinho, draag me) + more cool records. But for the most part these are records to fill in some gaps on your Best of 2023 list. Am I saying to skip this month’s Recommended Albums post? Not in the slightest. You could find your AOTY here. Am I saying that September, a month that is nearly 86% over already, has featured better albums already, I’d say yeah. But still, listen away, why don’tcha.

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Listen: Tirzah – “their Love” [2023]

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Tirzah, one of my favorite musicians of the last decade, surprise dropped an album this past Tueday, entitled trip9love… ???, co-produced with longtime collaborator Mica Levi + recorded over the last year. Interestingly, the record features the same beat across the full project, zhushed up with different distortion or tempo. Nearly each track has deep, echoing piano as well, along with Tirzah’s vocals, more often than not, pretty far up into the mix.

The whole album is fantastic, but I’m featuring the song that was an instant favorite for me, “their Love”, which is probably the most spare track on the record, mostly featuring piano and Tirzah’s voice. Her performance and melodies really shine here.

Not much to say since I’m writing this late at night + trying to get one more post scheduled before my vacation, but Tirzah is always worth it, and I’ll always be in her corner.

Tirzah’s trip9love… ??? is out now via Domino. Listen more + buy via Bandcamp below.

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Listen: Sean La’Brooy – “140 to the Pin (feat. Greg Carleton)” [2023]

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Sometimes you just want tunes that remind you of memory-holed soundtracks from early PS2 games that you rented from GameFly back in the day. You don’t even remember what these games were like, but you vaguely remember shades of its soundtrack. Summer break. The time limit is zero. That’s what I felt like I’ve found on this Sean La’Brooy album, There’s Always Next Year, out now via Melbourne’s Analogue Attic Recordings. The entire album is a groove and a great way to spend the last remaining hot days of the year soaking in.

The song begins like the genesis of a pleasant dream. Wafts of saxophone and washes of synth drift ashore like a sea breeze. Slowly a beat starts chipping in, with watery piano bending whichever way it wants (a signature of early 00s game soundtracks – a bendy piano). The saxophone becomes more pointed in its delivery, no longer content at just letting things float along. Suddenly a more electronic backdrop percolates forward, again with bendy, almost tubular stabs of synth egging on the listener to grind some kind of rail in a graffiti-filled sewer.

Parts of it remind me of the idyllic pop miniatures of Domenique Dumont, while the bending electronics and their y2k-era aesthetics bring me to the 2021 CFCF album. It’s a delightful late summer listen, one I’m happy I stumbled upon when I did, as NYC plunges into yet another heat wave.

Sean La’Brooy’s There’s Always Next Year is out now via Analogue Attic Recordings. Listen more + buy via Bandcamp below.

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Listen: Badge Époque Ensemble – “Air, Light & Harmony” [2023]

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This world is full of constants: death, taxes, and Warm Visions covering Badge Époque Ensemble. These things will never fade, even long after we’re all gone.

The Canadian jazz-funk group’s new album Air, Light & Harmony arrives November 3rd via Telephone Explosion Records, their fourth LP for the label since 2019, and sixth overall. The album is also the final piece of a trilogy, the others being 2019’s Nature, Man & Woman and 2021’s Future, Past & Present, which all sample and take stems from previous BÉE records, warping them into new creations behind the intensely skilled instrumental prowess of the band themselves, once again flexing their versatility as elite studio musicians, as well as sampler extraordinaires.

The title track, “Air, Light & Harmony” is out now and is a lightweight groove, immediately bringing to mind a hot day spent out on a veranda, with shadows in the form of stray patches of disharmony occasionally floating in like clouds. Across the chunky drums, saxophone lilts away and organ steams up the place. A vibraphone solo offers a glassy quality, beads of moisture gathering on the outside of your beverage. A satiny guitar solo stretches out time, rubberizing stiff joints. BÉE’s ever-present flute closes things out, signaling the curtain closing on this afternoon, but leaving the door open for the rest of the album.

Badge Époque Ensemble’s Air, Light & Harmony is out November 3rd via Telephone Explosion. Listen more + pre-order below.

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Listen: Edsel Axle – “Some Answer” [2023]

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Looking for a little discordant shredding to start kick off your week? Yes it’s Tuesday, but I had Labor Day off. From all things. But back to the previous prompt, if you need some beautiful disharmony, look no further than the new record from Edsel Axle, aka blog fav Rosali Middleman’s solo guitar project. Her new album Variable Happiness is out now via Worried Songs, and most likely going to be featured in my Recommended Albums of September 2023.

The song I’ve chosen in particular here is “Some Answer”, the opener for the record. Putting it on a few weeks back gave me a kind of magical feeling, one that harkened back to times like when I listened to The Dirty Three for the first time. Layers of bending and wilting guitar pile onto one another, washing ashore and receding like the current. There’s a recurring, trembling passage that works its way into the mix throughout the song as well, adding depth and color to the churning guitar passages. To some the dissonance might feel overwhelmingly ugly, but I was struck by a sense of awe & beauty I haven’t felt in a while listening to new music. Love this track.

Listen to this + buy Variable Happiness via Bandcamp below.

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