Friday 14 December 2007

Women Of The Year 2007.


2007 has had some richly varied highlights, but for me the overarching constant was the level of quality from, without wanting to sound too Brit Awards about it, solo female artists. While some artists have outright disappointed (Alicia Keys, Kate Nash, Uffie) and others have yet to show their full potential (Candie Payne, Amanda Blank), these 30 women have made music that my iPod thumb keeps returning to. (I've linked to the myspace pages of a few of the less well known artists - give them all a once-over, you won't be disappointed).

30. Yelle – Irrepressible French cheese-pop chanting, but also soft naïve afternoon grooves.
29. Joanna Newsom – “Colleen” is the only new stuff released this year, but it mines a groove as deep as any funk queen.
28. Eve – “Tambourine” is a risky, brilliant track, and her fluoro-Versace look is awesome.
27. Duffy – Radio 2 incarnate, but some voices just cannot be denied. The Bernard Butler co-writing/producing avoids the cheese-layering production that sadly befell talented singers like James Morrison.
26. Rye Rye – Impenetrable Bmore b-girl stances from a girl who knows how good she is.
25. Alena Diane – Sandstone folk torch songs a world away from pell-mell modernity.
24. Robyn – “With Every Heartbeat” looked like it might not get picked up by the mainstream, and then suddenly it was Number 1. Anything less would have been criminal.
23. Amerie – She’s plainly got the funk up inside her, and you can still hear her hunger.
22. Hanne Hukkelberg – 2nd essential album in two years. A truly unique talent.
21. Tiffany Evans – American Idol reject comes good on the overlooked Timbaland jam of the year below.
mp3: Tiffany Evans - Girl Gone Wild

20. Bjork – Volta may not be my personal favourite of her records, but she is still operating outside her comfort zone as ever.
19. Gwen Stefani – “The Sweet Escape” unforgettably uplifting pop, and the “Now That You Got It” remix was equally insidious sunshine.
18. Stacy Epps – Warm but coughing soulful hip-hop. Check out her verse over one of the best beats of the year below.
mp3: Shape Of Broad Minds - They Don't Know (feat. Stacy Epps)
17. Sharon Jones – Hell hath no fury...
16. Santogold – Effortlessly straddles Switchy squelch-garage and 80’s powerpop.
15. Adele – Going to own 2008. Takes the bruised soul of Amy Winehouse and nurses it back to health; takes the quirks of Regina Spektor and makes them guileless.
14. Julianna Barwick – Hypnotic sylvan loops. Ragas for hissing summer lawns.
mp3: Julianna Barwick - Dancing With Friends
13. Janelle Monaé – Great guest spots on Outkast’s Idlewild, even better on this space-pop classic. A big tip for next year.
mp3: Janelle Monaé - Violet Stars Happy Hunting!
12. Kid Sister – Another one who could go stratospheric. Like Rye Rye she has that ridiculous flow that doesn't show off but just calmly announces its own brilliance.
11. Leona Lewis - Holy shit:


10. Bat For Lashes – Eventually made it this year despite some rather half-hearted promotion from her record company.
9. Tracy Thorn – Her album had the kind of production that tips its cap at the 80’s without pastiche. Metro Area, Ewan Pearson et al go to town with that timeless voice.
mp3: Tracy Thorn - It's All True (Escort extended remix)
8. Feist – Breezy afternoon picnic-radio music.
7. Amy Winehouse – A modern icon. Roll on the Grammys.
6. Roisin Murphy - Classic house and pop sung by unglazed porcelain. Kylie is jealous.
5. Alice Smith – Will her album For The Lovers, Dreamers And Me ever get a UK release? Subtly modern, blatantly sensual.
mp3: Alice Smith - Dream
4. Rihanna – Her album has some high points, but come on, she's here for “Umbrella”. Instantly memorable and still endlessly involving.
3. Kathy Diamond – Her Miss Diamond To You will go down as one of the all-time great lost records. Insane shimmering disco production from Maurice Fulton.
mp3: Kathy Diamond - All Woman
2. M.I.A. – Absolutely attuned to phonetics as all great rappers should be, and a fantastic producer.

1. Ciara – Her album is underrated, she can dance better than any other R'n'B starlet, but she's at the top for “Promise”, perhaps my most listened-to track this year, and the greatest R’n’B slow jam ever recorded. Amazing precise delivery, transcendent production, a furlined future-caramel masterpiece.
mp3: Ciara - Promise

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

hey there, this post was a great read, lots in common and i really should investigate the names i don't know
surprise number one though, apart from promise i didn't like anything she released from her follow-up and after the goodies on her first album i didn't even bother to hear it

cheers!