THE OUTSIDE LANE
Bo Burnham, Inside (Imperial/Republic via Ingrooves): As we've noted elsewhere, the multiple-Emmy-winning Inside—the soundtrack to Burnham’s riveting one-man show on Netflix—is as powerful and cohesive a work about the present moment as we’ve heard, taking on a wild variety of styles. It’s a genuine album rather than just a collection of songs, speaking (with robust humor and real gravity) to the weird circumstances of the pandemic and their affect on our mental health. Burnham was pushed out of BNA and Comedy Album by insider dealings; will his brave, brilliant creation get its due?THE PROBLEM CHILDREN
Kanye West, Donda (G.O.O.D./Def Jam): He's had his biggest impact in some time with the musically eclectic and thematically devout Donda; the difficulty, again, is with the artist rather than the work. Ye’s MAGA nonsense, chaotic bids for attention (including at the Grammy podium) and absurd 11th-hour tinkering eclipsed a truly engrossing and original album that reminds us why Kanye became a massive producer and top-tier artist in the first place. Will he be recognized for it, or relegated to the Gospel and Rap categories? It would be very smart of Grammy to include him, for all sorts of reasons. Morgan Wallen, Dangerous: The Double Album (Big Loud/Republic): Here we have a classic case of “irresistible force meets immovable object.” Wallen’s Dangerous is simply too big—and too good—not to be acknowledged, but his drunken use of a racial slur stained his reputation—and Grammy, with its studiously public attention to social justice and diversity, doesn’t want that stain on its immaculate shirtfronts. Will Wallen always have an asterisk next to his name? How might his CMA situation alter the dynamics here?SURPRISES, WHAT-IFS AND/OR WTFS
WizKid, Made in Lagos (Starboy/RCA): As the Afrobeat movement continues to gain momentum, this Nigerian artist is poised to become not only its foremost exponent but its next superstar. He’s been at it for more than a decade but is clearly having a moment, as evidenced by high-flying single “Essence” f/Tems. Lagos merges danceable grooves and melodic elements from all over the planet into a mighty tasty elixir, aided by guests like Damian Marley, Burna Boy and Skepta. Hildur Guðnadóttir & Sam Slater, Battlefield 2042: Official Soundtrack (EA Music): Icelandic composer/musician Guðnadóttir has collected an Oscar, some Grammys and an Emmy, among other laurels, for her brilliant score work on Joker and Chernobyl. Here she and collaborator Slater enter new territory with a sonic collage that manages to evoke the EA game’s dystopian vision in all its anxiety and kaleidoscopic strangeness—and is a compelling album experience all its own. Suggesting predecessors as diverse as John Cage and Nine Inch Nails, Battlefield is a harrowing, brilliant odyssey. Jazmine Sullivan, Heaux Tales (RCA): Another exceptionally strong adult-R&B set, this veteran writer/singer's latest is packed with truth-telling earworms like the magnificent “Pick Up Your Feelings.” Sullivan is a powerhouse vocalist who at times recalls Mary J. Blige at her most gorgeously raw, but her influences are pleasingly eclectic, embracing hip-hop, jazz, pop and rock.Hej Prijatelj, Kuverta Polna Bumpskega (Dejanski Zapisi): This Slovenian glam-metal troupe tempers its bombast with incandescent folk melodies, creating some truly otherworldly moments. After the global success of Måneskin, could Grammy recognize a leather-clad Eastern European collective that runs its accordion through a wall of Marshall amps? We like to think anything’s possible.
LATE BREAKERS
These two albums, one released on 9/24 and the other due on 9/30 in a deadline-obliging cassette-only drop (with other formats to follow on 10/1), are likely the last two major sets to come out within the Grammy eligibility period as possible AOTY contenders.