hip-hop
Earl Sweatshirt, "Some Rap Songs" (Columbia)
Most hook-averse rappers use studio obscurantism to hide their lack of pithiness, but Sweatshirt's got a hell of a defense: "Stuck in Trumpland watching subtlety decaying," he mumbles on "Veins." So this is an argument for subtlety. He still abjures choruses entirely, and depression is still his lone subject, maybe even more so now that he's lost a world-renowned father and uncle.
Yet his inauspiciously titled third record is easily the most musical thing he's ever done, with outsourced loops on "Nowhere2go," "The Mint" and "The Bends" that are downright gorgeous, like classic Kanye West soul samples pitched down and knocked off their 4/4 time signature. He even delivers the rewinding Curtis Mayfield sample on "Veins" himself. And his late uncle Hugh Masekela provides the entirety of "Riot!," a closer that bridges the death and depression that fog his work on the regular, with the melodic brightness that is their salvation here.
Dan Weiss, Philadelphia Inquirer
pop/rock
Van Morrison, "The Prophet Speaks" (Caroline)
"The Prophet Speaks" is the latest in an exceedingly prolific stretch for Morrison — the album is his fourth since the start of 2017. It also follows the pattern of the previous three, with the famed Irish soul man and mystic focusing on the vintage R&B and jazz that originally inspired him while mixing in a handful of originals. He and his band are also joined again by Joey DeFrancesco, although the organ and trumpet virtuoso is not co-credited on the cover, as he was on April's "You're Driving Me Crazy."
Morrison remains thoroughly committed to this source music, as he puts his stamp on numbers by immortals including John Lee Hooker, Sam Cooke, Willie Dixon, and Solomon Burke. (He must be having fun, too: The cover shows the famously difficult Morrison shushing a ventriloquist's dummy.)
The new originals hold up well in this company. "Got to Go Where the Love Is" is a buoyant slice of pop-soul, "5 A.M. Greenwich Mean Time" and "Love Is Hard Work" swing with all the aplomb of the performances of the older material, and the moody "Ain't Gonna Moan No More" fittingly references Louis Armstrong, Muddy Waters and Hooker, among others. If the title song finds Morrison hectoring a bit, "Spirit Will Provide" reveals him at his gentlest, offering some comfort and reassurance in turbulent times.