My top 25 albums of 2016 – #’s 25-21.

Don’t let anyone tell you that there’s no good music anymore.  There is always good music.  You just have to find it.  I hope this list and this blog helped you discover some good stuff in 2016.

I reviewed close to 50 albums released in 2016 last year, so I’ve decided to highlight the top 25.   Here are numbers 25-21.
25.Slaves bring great British punk that skewers not only the elite rich, but also Millennial slackers and even the stupidity of drunk driving.

24.Dunsmuir is a metal supergroup featuring members of Clutch, Fu Manchu, The Company Band, and Black Sabbath.  Their debut is a concept record about a shipwrecked crew fighting monsters on a remote island.

23.

Canadian psych-rockers Elephant Stone have yet to put out a bad record, and this one added electro touches to their mix of 1960’s psychedelia and bhangra.

22. 

Birth is a fine piece of stoner rock from this three-piece Australian outfit.  I was on a big stoner rock kick in 2016 and ORB certainly fit the bill.

21. 

Klaus Johann Grobe were a delightful discovery this year, and their latest album, Spagat Der Liebe, is a fun electro / lounge record suitable for both late night parties and making out.

Who cracks the top 20?  Come back tomorrow to find out!

Keep your mind open.

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Klaus Johann Grobe – Spagat Der Liebe

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German electro-duo Klaus Johann Grobe’s (Daniel Bachmann and Sevi Landolt) newest record, Spagat Der Liebe (The Balancing Act of Love), is forty minutes of groovy neo-lounge music perfect for late night drinks, clubbing, lovemaking, driving, or all four. Just don’t mix the driving with the drinking or the lovemaking. Safety first.

“Ein Guter Tag” (“A Good Day”) kicks off the record with groovy bass and space synths. It’s a perfect way to start your day, really. “Wo Sind” (“Where Are”) has catchy bold synths and crisp drumming throughout it. “Rosen Des Abschieds” (“Roses of Farewells”) will get you dancing with its groovy bass and snappy percussion. The vocals, despite being about a break-up, are wonderfully light and help the song bounce.

“Pure Fantasie” (You can guess the translation.) is pretty much a lounge version of a slow jam. It’s meant to inspire you to get your freak on, so put it on your latest make-out playlist. “Heut Abend Nur” (“Tonight Only”) sounds like something you’d hear in a 1960’s European art film.

“Geschichten Aus Erster Hand” (“Stories Firsthand”) has some of the few English lyrics (“Come on, baby.”), but the chorus of “tanzen, tanzen, tanzen” (“dance, dance, dance”) is what will stick in your head. “Ohne Mich” (“Without Me”) has synths straight from a 1980’s OMD record, or so it seems.

If this record hasn’t hooked you by now, the flute solo by Roman Weissert on “Liebe am Strand” (“Love on the Beach”) will not only hook you, it will yank you out of the water. “Springen Wie Damals” (“Jump as Then”) has a killer drum and bass breakdown in it that will make you stop what you’re doing and listen. The closer, “Gedicht” (“Poem”), would make a fine addition to the soundtrack for a movie about a retiring private eye.

Don’t worry that nearly all the lyrics are in German. You won’t care because the music on this album is so groovy and cool. Euro-lounge music needs to be played everywhere now and then, if you ask me, and Klaus Johan Grobe are fine ambassadors for it.

Keep your mind open.

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Levitation Austin artist spotlight: Klaus Johann Grobe

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Swiss electro / house duo Klaus Johann Grobe create an interesting mix of stuff I can best describe as “electro-lounge.”  They sample a lot of Euro sounds and lay down some good dance beats.

Levitation Austin is bringing in a lot of electro, synth, and techno acts this year.  There are a few I want to see and these two cats are one of them.

Keep your mind open.

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