Choice Highlights From The Last Year Part Two

In case you missed Part One of this illustrious list, here’s a recap.

I said I wasn’t going to do it this year. And this may be the last. But here is the second part of a comprehensive revue listing of choice albums (some extended EPs too) from 2025 that we returned to the most, enjoyed or rated highly. See it as a sort of random highlights package if you will.

As usual a most diverse mix of releases, listed alphabetically – numerical orderings make no sense to me unless it is down to a vote, otherwise what qualifies the placing of an album? What makes the 25th place album better than the 26th and so on…

Whilst there is the odd smattering of Hip-Hop releases here and there, our resident selector and expert Matt Oliver has compiled a special 25 for 25 revue of his own, which will go out next week.

Part One: A to M can be perused here

N……………

Neon Crabs ‘Make Things Better’ (Half Edge Records) 
Review by Dominic Valvona

Noir & Superior, Che ‘Seeds In Babylon’
Picked by Dominic Valvona

Novelle & Rob Mazurek, Alberto ‘Sun Eaters’ (Hive Mind Records) 
Review by Dominic Valvona

Nowaah The Flood ‘Mergers And Acquisitions’
Picked by Dominic Valvona

O……………

Occult Character ‘Next Year’s Model’ (Metal Postcard Records)
Picked by Dominic Valvona

P…………….

Philips Arts Foundation, Lucy ‘I’m Not A Fucking Metronome’
Reviewed by Brian Bordello Shea here

Phill Most Chill & Djar One ‘Deal With It’ (Beats House Records)

Picniclunch ‘snaxbandwitches’
Review by Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea

Pound Land ‘Can’t Stop’ (Cruel Nature Records) 
Review by Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea

Q……………..

Querci, Cosimo ‘Rimane’ (Quindi Records) 
Review by Dominic Valvona

R………………

Robertson, Kevin ‘Yellow Painted Moon’
Review by Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea

Rose, Sophia Djebel ‘S​​​é​​​cheresse’ (Ramble Records/WV Sorcerer Productions/Oracle Records) 
Review by Dominic Valvona

Rumsey, Andrew ‘Collodion’ (Gare du Nord) 
Review by Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea

S……………….

SAD MAN ‘Art’ (Cruel Nature Records)
 Review by Dominic Valvona

Salem Trials ‘Heavenly Bodies Under The Ground’ (Metal Postcard Records) 
Review by Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea

Sanders, Pharoah ‘Love Is Here – The Complete Paris 1975 ORTF Recordings’
(Elemental Music Records) Picked by Dominic Valvona

Schizo Fun Addict ‘An Introduction To…’ (Fruits der Mer) 
Review by Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea

Schnitzler, Conrad ‘RhythmiCon’ (Flip-Flap) 
Review by Dominic Valvona

Scotch Funeral ‘Ever & Ever’
Review by Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea

Silva, Maria Elena ‘Wise Men Never Try’ Review
Wise Men Never Try Vol. II’ Review by Dominic Valvona

Širom ‘In the Wind of Night, Hard-Fallen Incantations Whisper’
(Glitterbeat Records) Picked by Dominic Valvona

Sleepingdogs ‘DOGSTOEVSKY’ (Three Dollar Pistol Music)
Picked by Dominic Valvona

Soft Speaker ‘Rippling Tapestries’ (Cruel Nature Records)
Review by Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea

Sol Messiah ‘War of the Gods’ Picked by Dominic Valvona

Staraya Derevyna ‘Garden Window Escape’ (Ramble Records/Avris Media) 
Review by Dominic Valvona

Stewart, Macie ‘When The Distance Is Blue’ (International Anthem) 
Review by Dominic Valvona

T………………..

Teamaker, Marc ‘Teas n Seas’
Review by Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea

Theravada ‘The Years We Have’ Picked by Dominic Valvona

Toivanen Trio, Joona ‘Gravity’ (We Jazz)
Reviewed by Dominic Valvona here

Tomo-Nakaguchi ‘Out Of The Blue’ (Audiobulb Records)
Review by Dominic Valvona

Tortoise ‘Touch’ (International Anthem X Nonesuch Records)
Review by Dominic Valvona

Toxic Chicken ‘Mentally Sound’ (Earthrid) 
Review by Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea

Trupa Trupa ‘Mourners’ (Glitterbeat Records)
Info/Singles Review Feature by Dominic Valvona

U…………………

Uhlmann, Josh Johnson, Sam Wilkes, Gregory ‘Uhlmann Johnson Wilkes’
(International Anthem) Review by Dominic Valvona

Ujif_notfound ‘Postulate’ (I Shall Sing Until My Country Is Free) 
Review by Dominic Valvona

V………………….

Various ‘TUROŇ/AHUIZOTL’ (Swine Records w/ Fayuca Retumba)
Review by Dominic Valvona

Various ‘Wagadu Grooves Vol. 2: The Hypnotic Sound Of Camera 1991 – 2014’
(Hot Mule) Review by Dominic Valvona

Vexations ‘A Dream Unhealthy’ (Cruel Nature Records) 
Review by Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea

Violet Nox ‘Silvae’ (Somewherecold Records) 
Review by Dominic Valvona

Voodoo Drummer ‘HELLaS SPELL’
Review by Dominic Valvona

W…………………..

Wants, The ‘Bastard’ (STTT) 
Review by Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea

Warda ‘We Malo’ (WEWANTSOUNDS)
Review by Dominic Valvona

West Virginia Snake Handlers Revival ‘They Shall Take Up Serpents’
(Sublime Frequencies) Reviewed by Dominic Valvona

Winter Journey, The ‘Graceful Consolations’ (Turning Circle)
Reviewed by Dominic Valvona here

Y…………………….

Yellow Belly ‘Ghostwriter’ (Cruel Nature Records) 
Review by Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea

Young Mothers, The ‘Better If You Let It’ (Sonic Transmissions) 
Review by Dominic Valvona

Z……………………..

Zavoloka ‘ISTYNA’ Picked by Dominic Valvona

For those that can or wish to, the Monolith Cocktail has a Ko-fi account: the micro-donation site. I hate to ask, but if you do appreciate what the Monolith Cocktail does then you can shout us a coffee or two through this platform.

Our Monthly Playlist selection of choice music and Choice Releases list from the last month.

We decided at the start of the year to change things a little with a reminder of not only our favourite tracks from the last month but also a list of choice albums too. This list includes both those releases we managed to feature and review on the site and those we just didn’t get the room for – time restraints and the sheer volume of submissions each month mean there are always those records that miss out on receiving a full review, and so we have added a number of these to both our playlist and releases list.

All entries in the Choice Releases list are displayed alphabetically. Meanwhile, our Monthly Playlist continues as normal with all the choice tracks from October, taken either from reviews and pieces written by me – that’s Dominic Valvona – and Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea. Our resident Hip-Hop expert Matt Oliver has also put forward a smattering of crucial and highlighted tracks from the rap arena.

CHOICE RELEASES FROM THE LAST MONTH OR SO:

Bedd ‘Do Not Be Afraid’
Review

Joel Cusumano ‘Waxworld’
(Dandyboy Records) Review

Peter Evans’ Being & Becoming ‘Ars Ludicra’
(More Is More Records) Review

Will Glaser ‘Music of The Terrazoku, Ethnographic Recordings From An Imagined Future’ 
(Not Applicable) Review


Amira Kheir ‘Black Diamonds’
(Sterns Music/Contro Culture Music)
Review

The Legendary Ten Seconds ‘Ricardian Churchward’
Review

NiCKY ‘with’
(PRAH Recordings) Review

Picniclunch ‘snaxbandwitches’
Review

Cosimo Querci ‘Rimane’
(Quindi Records) Review

Širom ‘In the Wind of Night, Hard-Fallen Incantations Whisper’
(Glitterbeat Records)


Striped Bananas ‘Eternity Forest’

Review


Sum of R ‘Spectral’


Tortoise ‘Touch’
(International Anthem X Nonesuch Records) Review

Vexations ‘A Dream Unhealthy’
(Cruel Nature Records) Review

Violet Nox ‘Silvae’
(Somewherecold Records) Review

THE PLAYLIST::

Howling Bells ‘Heavy Lifting’
Melody’s Echo Chamber ‘Eyes Closed’
Arcigrandone & Sone Institute ‘Ancide Sol La Morte’
Pray-Pax ‘Can’t’
Peter Evans Being & Becoming ‘Pulsar’
Petter Eldh Ft. Savannah Harris ‘MIDSUM BREW’
Myka 9, Blu & Mono En Stereo ‘Battle’
Jesse the Tree & Sage Francis ‘A Bad MFer’
Verb T & Vic Grimes ‘Distraction’
Elsio Mancusco & Berto Pisano ‘Nude per l’assassino’
Joker Starr Ft. AnyWay Tha God & Jazz T ‘Don’t Try to Test’
Summers Sons Ft. Ben B.C ‘Promises’
Sebastian Rojas ‘Pulmon Del Tropico’
Amira Kheir ‘Rabie Aljamal (Spring of Wonder)’
Oswald Slain ‘Cranberry Juice’
NiCKY ‘I Saw You’
The Legendary Ten Seconds ‘Bones in the River’
Edward Rogers ‘Astor Place’
Joel Cusumano ‘Death-Wax Girl’
The Stripped Bananas ‘Vampire of Mine’
Bedd ‘Paulie’s a Bum’
Legless Trials ‘American Russ Never Sleeps’
Vexations ‘Let Me In’
OvO ‘Gemma’
Sum of R ‘Violate’
GRABENFUSSS ‘Broken Kingdoms’
Cosimo Querci ‘Rimanemai’
Valley Voice ‘As Though I Knew’
Samara Cyn ‘vitamins n minerals’
The Strange Neighbour ‘No Mans Land’
Truth by Design ‘Stray Shots’
The Cool Kids, Sir Michael Rocks & Chuck Inglish ‘We Got Clips’
Dillion & Paten Locke ‘Always Never’
Sol Messiah & Connect The Dots Movement ‘Small axe wins the battle’
Tortoise ‘Works and Days’
Sirom ‘For You, This Eve, the Wolves Will Be Enchantingly Forsaken’
Violet Nox ‘Whisper’
Liz Cooper ‘New Day’
Sweeney ‘Silent J’
RULES ‘Run Boy’
Tinariwen ‘Chaghaybou – Adalan’

For the last 15 years both me and the MC team have featured and supported music, musicians and labels we love across genres from around the world: ones that we think you’ll want to know about. No content on the site is paid for or sponsored, and we only feature artists we have genuine respect for /love or interest in. If you enjoy our reviews (and we often write long, thoughtful ones), found a new artist you admire or if we have featured you or artists you represent and would like to say thanks or show support, than you can now buy us a coffee or donate via https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail

Album Review By Dominic Valvona

Image courtesy of Todd Weaver

Tortoise ‘Touch’
(International Anthem X Nonesuch Records) 24th October 2025

The highly influential and many tentacled Tortoise collective have pretty much reached a pantheon status as innovators of a postmodernist fusion of influences and musical strands that includes jazz and all its many fecund offshoots, rock, the leftfield, the avant-garde and the electronic. This almost seamless if explorative and experimental embrace of “post-everything” ideas is unsurprising, for they were hot-housed in that much important cultural hub of Chicago, home to some of the most important and most influential developments and artists in the jazz, the blues, rock ‘n’ roll, dance music and hip-hop fields. Of course, there’s also that post-rock scene tag to consider, a label that has followed the group around since their inception in the early 1990s – although the story really begins back in the late 80s with founding members Douglas McCombs and drummer John Herndorn, both of which, despite some lineup changes, departures and new recruitments over the past thirty odd years, have stayed the course. 

Whether together under the Tortoise shell or apart, divided up into spin-offs and wholly sperate projects and entities (from the various versions of the Chicago Underground to Isotope 217 and Brokeback) their reach on the late 20th and early 21st centuries musical landscapes has been impressive. They’ve arguably created something that is there’s alone; a language and method (apparently anarchic yet egalitarian) that works for such a diverse range of musicians with experiences in an eclectic range of genres. But they’ve been apart as a group, so to speak, since the release of 2016’s The Catastrophist.

Committed however to unifying the vehicle that has proven so successful, stalwarts McCombs and Herndorn are joined by Dan Bitney, John McEntire and Jeff Parker for their eighth album, Touch. Their first album in nearly nine years is also the first album to be recorded across a tri-cities network. Previous records have been recorded more or less in the city that birthed them: Chicago. But now, members are spread across state lines, in Portland and L.A., and so there’s a new impetus and methodology of remote exchange and layering: The process has changed somewhat from the days of collectively living and creatively jamming together under one loft space roof.

They’re back, but then again, they never left, grouping as they have under various umbrellas and collaborations. For example, guitarist Parker has branched out in recent years under his own name with albums on International Anthem, one of the partners, alongside Nonesuch Records, in the co-operative label sharing enterprise behind the new Tortoise album. Just as renowned on record as they are live, fans and those who’ve yet to be drawn towards the group but who might find this latest album appealing, will be delighted to hear that there’s a whole bunch of both North American and European live dates to look forward to this year and next.

Preludes and tasters, videos and multimedia teasers have been dropped in the run up to the Touch album release – some involving recent International Anthem roster names. And so, the anticipation has been building for months. Those familiar with the treasured catalogue will find a group certainly keen to plough new sonic and musical furrows, and yet remain connected to such iconic albums as Millions Now Living Will Never Die and TNT.

With references to a demanding work by a love-sick and hurt Erik Satie, a submarine volcano in the Pacific and the heaviest element in the periodic table, there’s prompted doses of science, geography and the avant-garde made human with emotional pulls and swept gestures that could be called romantic. For this time around Tortoise, no matter how unique in practice, seem to be creating a certain drama and evocative sentiment on tracks like the estranged Parisian tango shimmy and classically strained ‘Promenade à deux’, and the twangy mirage Western, reframed by Sky Records, gravity defying cosmic soundtrack ‘Oganesson’ – named after the Armenian/Russian nuclear physicist and the element that has the most heavy protons and electrons on the Periodic table, atomic number 118: a synthetic element if anyone is asking, that doesn’t appear naturally on Earth and which is extremely difficult to process. The former of those two tracks features the guest strings pairing of violinist Marta Sofia Honer (readers may recall Honer’s The Closet Thing To Silence partnership last year for International Anthem with Ariel Kalma and Jeremiah Chiu, which went on to make our choice albums of 2024 list) and cellist Skip Vonkuske adding their own special something to the transmogrified Francophone vibes.

Expanding into all sorts of areas musically and sonically, the album matches The Cars with Pino Rucher and Holy Fuck on the tubular bristled, clapped and encouraged turn timpani rumbling and nicely rolled-off ‘Vexations’ – a reference to the incredibly tough one-page notation piece by Satie that calls for the pianist to repeat an instruction 840 times, and takes anywhere from 16 to 20 hours to perform; Cage, not one to put off by such trivialities of endurance and an audience’s attention, famously had a go at it -, and evokes a motorik driven sensibility of Rother and Electrelane with hints of Thomas Dinger on the electrically harped ‘Axial Seamount’ – named after the complex and still poorly understood, it’s said, Pacific Ocean submarine volcano that sits at the epicentre of the Cobb-Eickelberg Seamount chain; first discovered in the 1970s.

Many ideas are formed, all congruously converging to create something a bit different; the doorbell like chimes and lattice of tubular bells and scaffold coming together with jazz-rock and the kosmsiche, or the Techno beats of ‘Elka’ that follow on from the squirrelling 80s fusion of new wave jazz turn heavily laboured, weighted down ‘Works and Days’. ‘A Title Comes’ meanwhile, reminded me of Sven Wunder reimagining the Faust Tapes. This is what they do best, forming or transducing what could be a mess of influences, strands and experiences into something that gels and conjures up descriptions, emotions, scenes, events, science facts, chemicals, and states of the mind and the landscape. And with this latest album, the comeback that might or might not be, they continue to avoid definition. Flexing if anything and creating ever new pathways for sonic and musical exploration. This album however is filled with mood music: some that dances and is propulsive, and some that are far more lucid and sensitive. Touch is an album that I predict will grow on you and get better with each and every play. Only time will tell if it becomes one of their most endurable and lasting influential works.

For the last 15 years both me and the MC team have featured and supported music, musicians and labels we love across genres from around the world: ones that we think you’ll want to know about. No content on the site is paid for or sponsored, and we only feature artists we have genuine respect for /love or interest in. If you enjoy our reviews (and we often write long, thoughtful ones), found a new artist you admire or if we have featured you or artists you represent and would like to say thanks or show support, than you can now buy us a coffee or donate via https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail