TalonsOfFire
Benjamin Kuettel
Emeritus

Reviews 107
Approval 96%

Soundoffs 127
News Articles 30
Band Edits + Tags 62
Album Edits 79

Album Ratings 3526
Objectivity 67%

Last Active 01-12-23 5:14 pm
Joined 08-27-12

Review Comments 21,001

 Lists
03.04.22 Being Emeritus and Fav Songs 02.23.22 Top 100 Opeth Songs
02.02.22 All Alcest Songs Ranked 01.10.22 Progressive and Gothic Euro-Metal
12.12.21 Top 25 Albums of 2021 10.04.21 Every Tool Song Ranked
12.15.20 Top 20 of 2020 10.28.20 3000 Album Ratings
12.23.19 50 Best Albums of the Decade Ranked 12.14.19 Ben's 25 Favorite Albums of 2019 Ranked
01.15.19 50th Anniversary of King Crimson 12.20.18 Top 25 Records of 2018
12.19.17 Talons' 2017 Favorites 09.13.17 Top 100 albums since - 2000 - Ratings f
08.26.17 Talons' 5 Year Sputversary 03.30.17 Concerts I've Attended
12.08.16 Talons' 2016 Favorites 02.08.16 Snow day jams
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Talons' 2017 Favorites

Here we are, another year gone by. I feel really fortunate and proud to have been able to review most of my favorite records of the year, all while hitting some big milestones in real life as well, like graduating college, getting my first full-time job, an amazing new car, and others. Thanks to all of you for the great conversations and recommendations, and feel free to drop your own favorites and recs in the comments.
25Godspeed You! Black Emperor
Luciferian Towers


A solid, subtle album from Godspeed with an excellent finale.
24Blackfield
Blackfield V


A really great art pop/rock album with great production and addicting songs. A nice preview for To The Bone, Wilson's solo effort later in the year.
23CHON
Homey


A lush, fun prog rock record reminiscent of Animals as Leaders.
22Beck
Colors


Beck goes pop, and results in addicting songs with enough layers and interesting songwriting choices to end up as another excellent album from the musical chameleon.
21alt-J
Relaxer


Wildly uneven, but the first song and last three tracks are amazing. No idea what they were thinking with the middle few songs, but the beauty of the last three save it.
20Paramore
After Laughter


Paramore pushed themselves and made something new, no longer sounding like their early-mid 2000s albums and going for a more rhythmic and Talking Heads-influenced style. It's their best album to date, with "Pool" being one of my favorite songs of the year.
19Toby Driver
Madonnawhore


This album reminds me of Bark Psychosis, but is even more sparse. Really nothing like the bands maudlin of the Well or Kayo Dot, this is a quiet, mysterious record that requires multiple listens to really digest. His live album of new material from later this year is also excellent.
18Heretoir
The Circle


A great blackgaze record with a lush sound and beautiful melodies galore. The debut was decent, but this shows all kinds of excellence and great potential for the band going forward.
17Soen
Lykaia


A very solid progressive metal album from progressive metal veterans. Not the most addicting or memorable album all the way through, but every time I throw this on, it's always a great listen. "Lucidity" and "Jinn" are highlights.
16Tim Bowness
Lost in the Ghost Light


A lush and addicting album from the other musician behind No-man, with Steven Wilson. There's a lot of Porcupine Tree and Pink Floyd influences, but Tim Bowness is no imitator. His latest solo effort is an intelligently crafted art rock record with great instrumental layering and carefully laid out progressions of each song.
15The Contortionist
Clairvoyant


The band go darker and most post-rock influenced here, similar to the new Anathema as well. It's a bit long, but the epic tracks have some amazing moments.
14Sleepmakeswaves
Made Of Breath Only


A really solid post-rock record, Sleepmakeswaves get a bit proggier and more ambitious for excellent results. "Tundra" and "Midnight Sun" are highlights.
13Fen
Winter


This is an excellent atmospheric metal album with beautiful post-rock sections, and just fantastic songwriting all around. The metal sections go on a bit too long for me, but it's all great stuff. Phenomenal production too.
12Ninet Tayeb
Paper Parachute


This is underrated, being a really great rock record with a lot of dynamics. The singles in particular are great, with "Child" being her best song in my opinion. The title track is one of the best rock songs of the year too, and the rest of the album holds up really well. It's great to hear a solo effort from her after becoming familiar with her great contributions to the latest Steven Wilson albums.
11Tom Rogerson with Brian Eno
Finding Shore


This is a late year entry, but it's an addicting and well made record. It's varied, unpredictable, and has just enough touches from '70s Brian Eno to lend it that sense of magic that projects like The Pearl and Cluster & Eno did. This combines improvisational piano, electronica, and ambient seamlessly for an exciting and dynamic album, and one of Eno's best collaborations in many years.
10LCD Soundsystem
American Dream


I only recently got into LCD Soundsystem, and it took me a while. Maybe I haven't jammed them enough, but to me, this is just as good as any of their previous records. The Talking Heads and Brian Eno influences really push it to excellence, with the lush synths in the slower, moodier songs and bouncy rhythms of the more danceable tracks making for a really enjoyable album experience overall.
9Anathema
The Optimist


A little uneven, but this sees Anathema shaking up their sound for a darker and more post-rock direction, like the new Contortionist. Lee Douglas is on many of the best songs, like "Endless Ways" and "Close Your Eyes."
8The War on Drugs
A Deeper Understanding


Another excellent The War on Drugs album, despite some familiar elements. I can't help but think at times that this style is going to run out of steam soon, but for now it's still going strong with some of the band's best cuts to date including "Thinking of a Place," "Strangest Thing," "Pain," and "In Chains."
6Slowdive
Slowdive


An excellent collection of dreamy shoegaze tracks, ranging from melancholy to more upbeat. The dual vocals really elevate the songs, and the band have not lost their touch after 20 years. Slowdive are still capable of exceeding expectations for a modern, invigorating comeback album that cements their talent and emotional resonance.
5Fleet Foxes
Crack-Up


This band is incredible, releasing another fantastic album after six years since Helplessness Blues. The music is just as beautiful as it ever was, the arrangements are more ambitious, and there's such a liberating feeling of freedom to this after the more conflicted and anxious Helplessness Blues. I still can't decide which is better, and it's clear that Fleet Foxes are one of the most exiting and innovative groups of the past decade.
4Ulver
The Assassination of Julius Caesar


Ghostly atmospheres are abound in Ulver's latest. Being their "pop" album, there are electro-pop melodies, dark synth passages, and even a few bass drops scattered throughout the run time. The lyrics traverse all times of history and mythology, while the music recalls a strange blend of their turn of the millennium records and Wars of the Roses. Garm's vocals are back in full force as well, all making for a resounding meditation on the dark side of history, mythology, and human nature.
3Brand New
Science Fiction


Brand New unceremoniously dropped their long-waited fifth album, Science Fiction, yet another rewarding new direction. Jesse & co. stray even farther from their roots, resembling the latest Thrice in some ways. The scattershot direction of Daisy comes to mind here, though the angst, fire, and rage is replaced with exciting, mature songwriting and a confident new direction. Whether it's superior to Daisy, or even The Devil and God are Raging Inside Me is not yet clear. What matters is that Brand New have exceeded expectations yet again, providing some of the most emotional and fascinating music of the year.
2The National
Sleep Well Beast


The National return with a sprawling and adventurous new album that holds up to their legendary career. They certainly aren’t afraid to take risks, as this is a masterful departure from recent predecessors, seeing the band enter a new era of their sound with further musical experimentation. The electronic elements add new dimensions and possibilities to each song. Despite the changes The National have undertaken, their brand of indie rock remains as impressive and fresh as their previous classics. Their musical world is one rife with unique insights and dark, detailed songwriting always able to emotionally connect and inspirit. Everything falls into place masterfully, being the second best album of the year.
1Steven Wilson
To the Bone


Steven Wilson strays further from progressive rock with his most forward thinking album yet. To The Bone is a colorful, accessible yet diverse rock album that explores the modern age of distorted truths and volatile nature of world affairs in 2017. Steven Wilson doesn't just revel in doom and gloom as one might anticipate him doing, but phases in and out of joyful moments ("Nowhere Now" and "Permanating"), being the most surprising here, and more progressive songs like the title track and "Detonation." Much of To The Bone follows a more straightforward rock pacing, but not without wide shifts in tone and mood. All in all, this is a hugely impressive statement from Wilson. It's an album that hearkens to Porcupine Tree's Stupid Dream in that it has the potential to be enjoyed by anyone, riding the line impressively between going very accessible (at times), and furthering artistry.
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