Editor’s Note: The Albumism staff has selected what we believe to be the 110 Best Albums of the 2010s, representing a varied cross-section of artists, genres, and styles. Click “Next Album” below to explore each album in the list or for easier navigation, view the full introduction & album index here.
DAMON ALBARN | Everyday Robots
Parlophone (2014)
Selected by Justin Chadwick
As an Amazon affiliate partner, Albumism earns commissions from qualifying purchases.
As the voice and most prominent face of Blur, Damon Albarn—along with the brothers Gallagher, Jarvis Cocker, Brett Anderson and Richard Ashcroft—was the hyper-publicized posterboy for Britpop in the mid 1990s. But his career since has seen the sophisticated songsmith shed such artifice in favor of a dogged, workmanlike approach to refining and stretching his craft beyond accepted creative comfort zones. Arguably destined to be forever overshadowed by his more extensive output with Blur and Gorillaz, Albarn’s inaugural solo LP Everyday Robots is a beautifully somber and ruminative song set that cements him as one of the greatest musical adventurists and most masterful songwriters of our time.
Highlights abound, but the meditative “Lonely Press Play,” sparse “Photographs (You Are Taking Now)” and “Mr. Tembo,” an endearing ode to a baby elephant Albarn encountered in Tanzania, rise to the top of this all-around inspired affair. Not a robotic exercise in the least bit as the title suggests, Albarn’s first and only solo album thus far is steeped in a profoundly human sincerity and vulnerability.
LISTEN & WATCH: