Top 100 Music Albums of 2013
by buzzdainer

In 2013 I lived near the shore of Lake Chatuge, just on the North Carolina side of the Georgia/North Carolina state line. I taught at a small United Methodist college nearby, and spent a lot of my time exploring the mountains and rivers of the Southern Appalachian mountains in which I lived. One of my favorite haunts was the Fires Creek area, a beautiful and infrequently visited wilderness where my dog and I almost always had the entire vast network of trails entirely to ourselves (and the bears and rattlesnakes). I often had the songs and albums mentioned on this list running through my head, and they conjure up great memories of those places I came to love very much. They also remind me of the girl I was seeing at the time. In many ways these albums reflect our shared tastes in music as much as they reflect my own individual palate. A passionate and earnest period in my life, a time of transition and growth, all qualities you could probably hear if you made a playlist out of this chart. But it wasn't all good: 2013 was also the year I was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes, an illness I've been lucky to survive (so far), as it made me so sick at one point that I literally couldn't lift myself out of bed, having to roll myself onto the floor and crawl to the bathroom. I am so grateful to modern medicine for providing me with the insulin I need to go on living. And I have a renewed appreciation for how fragile and precious life truly is.
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There's always been a physicality about Arcade Fire's sound--this is, after all, a band whose members used to find it necessary to wear football and motorcycle helmets on stage to be drummed upon--but the rhythm section has never popped on one of their albums the way it does here. That emphasis has producer James Murphy's stamp all over it. Win Butler says the band learned an important lesson early in the recording sessions: "If you can get James tapping his foot, you know you're on the right track." That approach really works on this album, as I find it Arcade Fire's most club-ready record yet (I say this as someone who never goes to clubs, but I might if they played songs like those on Reflektor). The title track offers the most intense moment here, when Butler and David Bowie launch into a gorgeous vocal hall of mirrors: "It’s just a reflection of a reflection / Of a reflection of a reflection of a reflection, ah!" Ah, indeed. [First added to this chart: 02/25/2016]
Year of Release:
2013
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Rank Score:
7,109
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Comments:
Buy album United States
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Canadian singer-songwriter Basia Bulat has a big voice, and when her material matches up to the voice with which she delivers it, the results can be stunning. One of the places on Tall Tall Shadow where this occurs is on the title track, which begins with Bulat on electric piano, and the shadow of a folk tune in the song. As the chorus builds you realize you’re hearing something like the quietly epic nature of Tapestry-era Carole King, minted new, fresh and from a different perspective. In fact, I think I'd wager that I like Basia Bulat better than I like Carole King, though that might be more of a generational thing. [First added to this chart: 07/13/2016]
Year of Release:
2013
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Rank Score:
22
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Buy album United States
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This is probably a slightly weird bias to have, but I tend to shy away from complicated collectives and partnerships and multi-artist compilations and such things, preferring more straightforward studio albums that are the singular vision of a single artist. As a result, I'm probably more likely than most to exclude artists with unusual names--unusual spellings of straightforward words, or bands with numbers in their name, or artist names with odd capitalization or punctuation. All this is to say, Yamantaka // Sonic Titan was a tough sell for me. But as operatic rock goes, this is way, way better than average, and it eventually won me over. The sound on Uzu is maybe a little hazy compared to their debut, but it's still some of the most creative, most culturally hybridized music out there. [First added to this chart: 07/29/2016]
Year of Release:
2013
Appears in:
Rank Score:
47
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Overall Rank:
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Comments:
Buy album United States
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[First added to this chart: 05/14/2017]
Year of Release:
2013
Appears in:
Rank Score:
3
Rank in 2013:
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Average Rating:
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Total albums: 4. Page 1 of 1
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Top 100 Music Albums of 2013 composition

Country Albums %


United States 78 78%
United Kingdom 8 8%
Mixed Nationality 4 4%
Canada 4 4%
Iceland 1 1%
Sweden 1 1%
Germany 1 1%
Show all

Top 100 Music Albums of 2013 chart changes

Biggest climbers
Climber Up 21 from 28th to 7th
Trouble Will Find Me
by The National
Biggest fallers
Faller Down 1 from 7th to 8th
The Beast In Its Tracks
by Josh Ritter
Faller Down 1 from 8th to 9th
Reflektor
by Arcade Fire
Faller Down 1 from 9th to 10th
The Ballad Of Boogie Christ
by Joseph Arthur

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Top 100 Music Albums of 2013 ratings

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89/100 (from 5 votes)
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04/13/2022 01:49 Moondance   47685/100
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03/28/2020 23:13 DJENNY   4,365100/100
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03/16/2018 07:03 desh79   1,27893/100
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03/03/2018 23:32 Graeme2   21394/100
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Top 100 Music Albums of 2013 comments

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From 03/16/2018 16:44 | #211056
Thanks for that kind comment, desh79! If you haven't heard Jason Isbell yet, and you like Americana music, you're in for a huge treat. I consider him one of the best living songwriters in any genre. I like Holly Williams a lot, too--there are some really good songs on The Highway, an album definitely worthy of her family name.
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From 03/16/2018 07:05 | #211041
Another great list! Jason Isbell and Holly Williams are two artists I definitely need to look up. Once I've updated my end-of-year-lists to reach 100 (I will soon start on my 2014 list) I will try and have as many detailed comments and descriptions as yours, though I can already see that is quite a challenge. :) Thanks for your comments and also sharing some interesting biographical bits, for giving some context.
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From 03/10/2018 20:57 | #210600
Thanks, Graeme2! The Silver Gymnasium and Once I Was an Eagle are my favorites by Okkervil River and Laura Marling, respectively. I love The Silver Gymnasium for its nostalgic appeals and creative storytelling, and Once I Was an Eagle is a fantastically bitter breakup album with amazing musicianship. The multi-song suite that opens the album is the strongest collection of songs in her career, in my opinion.
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From 03/03/2018 23:39 | #210049
I enjoyed reading the comments. I shall check out that okkervil album. Living near the southern Appalachians sounds swell. Think I've heard every marking record apart from that, need to hear it. Good stuff.
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From 11/26/2017 21:41 | #202115
For some reason a lot of people didn't like The Silver Gymnasium, including some pretty diehard Okkervil River fans. I will agree that it's different from a lot of their previous stuff, in part because of some major lineup changes in the band. I think it's some of Will Sheff's most personal work, and I like the cleanness of the production compared to, say, Black Sheep Boy (which I also love, though some of it sounds like it was recorded at the bottom of a well). I'd start with "Down the Deep River," which I think is a great song. If you like that one, you might like the rest of the album.
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From 11/26/2017 07:42 | #202092
Thanks for the nice comments you made on my chart - I also enjoyed reading the comments youve got against your albums here, great job! I think I need to give this Okkervil River more attention
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From 06/09/2017 15:11 | #192289
Thanks for the comment and rating, Exist-en-ciel! I think it would be quite rare for me to come across someone here on BEA who shares my musical tastes perfectly. But we do share a common appreciation for a lot of stuff, and I'm especially pleased to see Jason Isbell's Southeastern on your chart. It really is a brilliant album, so full of passion and insight. He tells stories in an incredibly clear and authentic way--lately I've really been appreciating "Elephant," although that one is usually bound to make me cry. Maybe that's what I'm looking for these days.
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