Crate Digging is a recurring feature in which an artist presents several albums within a theme that all music fans should know about. In this edition, Brooklyn synth-pop trio Nation of Language elaborate on their favorite albums for living in the city.
“In Manhattan, you cannot have it all,” Nation of Language’s Ian Devaney sang on the opening line of A Way Forward, the New York trio’s 2021 sophomore album. Like that rather dramatic lyric suggests, the shadow of the city looms large in Nation of Language’s discography. Their frenetic synth-pop sound mirrors the pace of the New York’s crowded streets and busy intersections; the way big emotions tumble out of the band in climactic, cathartic fashion is akin to asking “can anyone hear me?” in sea of pedestrians, to being that person weeping on the subway.
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Dance Called Memory, Nation of Language’s latest effort, is similarly made for the city; though instead of weeping in the subway, Dance Called Memory makes it feel like they’re weeping in a large Broadway house, Devaney’s booming baritone echoing right back at the listener with a touch of distance. Grief and personal lows were catalysts for the album’s potent hues, but to mourn in the city is a complicated task. How do you move on when the city has already moved on without you, another day beginning and more work to be done?
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But as they have on each of their four albums, the trio use each other as outlets. Alex MacKay’s restless basslines root these songs in joy and motion, and each time Aidan Noell’s voice pops in the fray, like on “In Another Life,” it’s angelic. Their infectious camaraderie in the face of anguish is what helps these songs float above the rising water, and the album then becomes a testament to creative pursuits.
This is all touched upon beautifully in the video for lead single “Inept Apollo,” itself an ode to artists in the city. As a camera pans unceasingly through a warehouse, a variety of artists are seen rehearsing their various disciplines in tightly-sealed practice rooms. It’s an apt summation of the relationship between public and private within urban environments, and a love letter to the idea that creative expression and the city go hand-in-hand.
It was a treat to hear which city albums resonate the most with Devaney, Noell, and MacKay, who have each seen multiple eras of music and art unfold in New York City throughout the years. Some of their picks are more obvious gems — like LCD Soundsystem’s Sound of Silver — while others are slightly more unexpected (scroll to the end to read about an Aldo Ciccolini record that Devaney swears by).
See Nation of Language’s picks below of the 10 city albums they think everyone should own, and stream their great new album, Dance Called Memory, here.
LCD Soundsystem — Sound of Silver
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<p><strong>Ian Devaney:</strong> This was one that was on all of our shortlists. Growing up in New Jersey and sort of envisioning this future time when I would move to New York, LCD Soundsystem just feels like such a definitive New York band of that era. There’s able to be both humor and deeply emotional stuff and fun dance music. There’s just a confluence of a lot of things that are hard to weave together.</p>
<p><strong>Aidan Noell:</strong> It’s great when one song can make you laugh out loud while touching a core emotion about what it is to live in New York. Having seen them many times now during their New York residencies, these songs have become even more impactful somehow. The feeling of jumping around and wailing with a full packed room to “Someone Great”… it’s very special and feels like the community aspect that you can really only get living in a city, and especially this city. Everyone is feeling the same thing at the same time.</p>
<p><strong>Ian Devaney:</strong> They’re just one of the most fun live bands to see. There’s something still very scrappy about it, even though it’s this really big production. It seems like they’re constantly working on it and it’s constantly evolving in little ways. That perpetual motion, to me, reflects a kind of city living that’s put into practice.</p>
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Essential Track: “Someone Great” (with nods to “Get Innocuous” and “New York, I Love You but You’re Bringing Me Down”)
Stream LCD Soundsystem’s Sound of Silver on Apple Music or Amazon Music | Buy on Vinyl/CD
Smerz — Big city life
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<p><strong>Alex MacKay:</strong> This album came out earlier this year and I’ve just been listening to it constantly. It’s one of those experiences where it scratched an itch I didn’t know I had — like, oh, this is a new kind of album that I haven’t really heard before. It’s very good for city listening, for walking around, and there are a lot of songs about nightlife and more reflective moments. There are some really weird interludes too.</p>
<p>What I love about it is that I still don’t really have the track list internalized, so when I listen through, when a song ends I really don’t know what’s gonna come next. It could be almost anything. The production is really restrained but also bangs really hard at the same time, which is a tough thing to do. It’s really minimal and feels like some of these songs could be birthed in one two-hour moment, one night. They talked about in an interview how a lot of times the vocal takes are just the first ones they did, right off the cuff after they’d written them. I think that’s a testament to how good their choices are.</p>
<p><strong>Essential Track:</strong> “You Got Time and I Got Money” (though Alex’s personal favorite is “Feisty”)</p>
<p><strong>Stream Smerz’s <em>Big city life</em> on <a href=)
Talking Heads — Fear of Music
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<p><strong>Ian Devaney:</strong> My parents lived in New York in the ’80s and were living in D.C. in the ’70s. There are all these great concert photos that my dad took seeing bands like The Clash and Talking Heads. For me, that era of New York music really shaped so much of how I see the urban experience — that amidst bad conditions, very interesting art can be created because it feels like nobody’s paying attention anyway and no one’s gonna stop you because there are bigger problems to solve.</p>
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