At least half of the best albums out of Minnesota so far in 2022 were actually made in 2021 or even 2020. But as Eleganza frontman Brian Vanderwerf rhetorically asked about his band's long-finished new LP, "If we couldn't play the songs live, what would the point be?"
The Cactus Blossoms, Chastity Brown, Cloud Cult, Poliça and Hippo Campus also all waited out COVID-19 lockdown before issuing their latest collections. Because, duh, they're touring bands.
Conversely, though, the other albums on this annual midyear best-of roundup are all by relative newcomers who seem to represent a COVID-era incubatory side to the Minnesota music scene that's waiting to burst.
Chastity Brown, 'Sing to the Walls'
She's been variously described as a folk, blues, Americana and soul singer, and here's a new one to add to the mix: funk master. The Tennessee transplant's first album in five years steps up the grooves to great effect in "Like the Sun" and especially "Back Seat," two highlights that might evoke more Curtis Mayfield comparisons than Joan Armatrading. Brown has some much deserved fun, but the folk and soul singer in her still can't help but comment on the hard times, with the traumatic post-George-Floyd epic "Golden" and the more soothing "Hope" sounding equally stunning. Stream/buy here
The Cactus Blossoms, 'One Day'
Leaning into their long solidified live band on record, harmonizing alt-twang brothers Page Burkum and Jack Torrey branch out on their third album into mellow-cool, '70s-vibe ditties like "Is It Over" and "Hey Baby" and more balladic territory. The Jenny Lewis collaboration "Everybody" would sound like a torchy Linda Ronstadt classic even without the added female voice. Stream/buy here
Cloud Cult, 'Metamorphosis'
The eight-member chamber-rock ensemble recorded its first new album in six years with a run of Minnesota Orchestra gigs on the calendar and on its mind. Songs like "One Way Out of a Hole" boast big arrangements and high drama, making the more intimate moments such as "Victor" and "Back Into My Arms" — both about fatherhood — hit all the more tenderly. All told, bandleader Craig Minowa's inner-spirited, outwardly caring songs sound more meaningful and helpful than ever coming out of the pandemic. Stream/buy
Eleganza, 'Water Valley High'
It's only rock 'n' roll, and it's pretty easy to like it when it's captured live in the studio over one rowdy week in a rural Mississippi town. Drive-by Truckers Matt Patton's production work helped bring out the Southern boogie and soulful twang from behind this band of Twin Cities rock vets' devilish guitars. Brian Vanderwerf also adds some smart songwriting touches about dumb Americans via "Scared and Stupid" and "Get Brown." Stream/buy
Hippo Campus, 'LP3'
Taking a rare long break from touring — by choice at first, then came COVID — the summery pop-rockers settled in for a long winter and many more months in a hi-fi studio with their fellow St. Paul high school classmate Caleb Heinz serving as producer. Smoothly sharpened hooks abound in standout tracks like "Ride or Die" or "Boys," but the ample tinkering time also led to an overriding sonic playfulness. Stream/buy