10. Peel Dream Magazine – Agitprop Alterna [Slumberland]
Fully in dream-pop/soft shoegaze mode, the New York-based band Peel Dream Magazine's second album further expands their sound until it's big-sky, widescreen-epic big. Their synths are clearly Stereolab-influenced, the noisy guitars beg for My Bloody Valentine comparisons, but those are perfect inspirations to build dreamy music around (in 2020 I'd much rather have them than yet another Beatles or Beach Boys-influenced pop-rock band). The vocals and tunes within the swirling mix are steady and graceful. The lyrics, when you pick up on them, are cryptic challenges, adding to the air of abstract act, of pastiche. Yet they're not without resonance. "The 21st century will kill me one day" -- indeed.
9. The Very Most – Needs Help [Lost Sound Tapes/Kocliko]
Since the early 2000s, Jeremy Jensen's the Very Most have created light, melodic, multi-instrumental pop with emotionally searching lyrics. Needs Help cuts deeper with the self-questioning, suited for 2020. And while the songs are personal expressions of doubt and compassion, the album also resembles a musical variety show, in part from his recruiting various fine female pop singers, from across the globe, to share the lead vocals on a majority of the songs. It was a brilliant move; he did something similar with male vocalists for 2016's synthy Syntherely Yours. Here, within more of a '60ish/Belle & Sebastianish sound, it again yields rewards, diversifying the personality, sound and emotional impact of the songs. Wearing music devotion on his sleeves, Jensen titles the last song, "Songs You Skipped 25 Years Ago (Say So Much)".
8. The Legends – The Legends [Golden Islands]
The number of "features" listed on the tracklist make it look like hip-hop, and perhaps that's the idea. The seventh album from Johan Angergård's always-changing the Legends project feels like a victory lap, basking in the luxury and power of stripped-down, unlabored-over tunes. Its brashness also resembles a fresh start. The songs and album are short (ten songs in 20 minutes) and the arrangements spare, making for a rush of melody and harmony, with simple, infectious grooves. Sometimes a couple minutes of a beat, a little repeated melody line, and bright/lusty pop vocals, is all you need.