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Showing posts with label Juice Nothing Article. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Juice Nothing Article. Show all posts

Tuesday, 25 November 2025

I Read The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster So You Don't Have To (Pastafarianism/Atheism)

I Read The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster So You Don't Have To (Pastafarianism/Atheism)

PLEASE NOTE: 2025 is my tenth consecutive year of analysing a book of scripture central to a religion. Before The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, I absorbed the teachings of The Quran (Islam - 2016), The Satanic Bible (LaVeyan Satanism - 2017), Dianetics (Scientology - 2018), The Bible (Christianity - 2019), The Book Of The Law (Thelema - 2020), the Tao Te Ching (Taoism - 2021), The Corpus Hermeticum (Hermeticism - 2022), and The Secret Doctrine (Theosophy - 2023), and The Kitáb-i-Aqdas (Baháʼí Faith, 2024). Check them all out, and you will be different for it.

As this is my 10th year reading and analysing a religion's scripture, I felt I had some leeway in choosing something sillier this round as a little treat. I decided on Pastafarianism's The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster because it may very well be the silliest "holy book" available. However, upon completion, there was an overwhelming sense that I had cheated the system, and my long line of study had been tarnished by something so intentionally ridiculous.

In an attempt to rectify my alignment, I widened the overall topic to cover atheism as a whole, which made sense because Pastafarianism is essentially a parody religion embraced by atheists. To deepen my education would mean finding another sacred scripture applicable to the (non)belief system, which, of course, by its very nature, cannot exist. Then again, if there ever was an argument to be made, it came with Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion, which might not be holy in any literal sense, but is often treated as such by the atheist community.

While I'm sure many a bookshelf has these two publications sat snuggly together, they are still vastly different works in both content and intention, which is why I could not comfortably merge my investigation into a unified presentation. Hence, I shall address them one at a time, with Pastafarianism first, then Dawkins second. Following this will be a much more in-depth breakdown of the Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster because, at the end of the day, it's still sacred scripture, depending on who you speak to.

The Gospel of Christ

The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster


Like any "religion" worth its seasoning, Pastafarianism (or the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster) has a human prophet. His name is Bobby Henderson. Unlike so many other theologies, he is provably real as a former physics student at Oregon State University.

His story begins in 2005. The Kansas State Board of Education announced that intelligent design (i.e. God created the Universe) would be taught alongside evolution to satisfy everyone's beliefs. Henderson opposed religion infiltrating government schools and explained as much to the board in an open letter. When he did not receive a reply, Henderson posted the letter on the internet, and, due to its hilariously imaginative content, it landed in the right place at the right time, and its popularity exploded beyond anyone's reasonable expectations. Still, looking back at it now, the virality potential was undeniable.

Henderson announced that he believed in a Flying Spaghetti Monster. This is an invisible and undetectable deity who, during an intense drinking session, created the Universe. It's an amusingly simple concept with profound philosophical consequences. As many have pointed out, Henderson merely offered a variation of Bertrand Russell's teapot analogy, whereby anyone can claim that a tiny teapot is currently floating in space orbiting the Sun. According to Russell, it should be up to the individual who made the teapot claim to prove its existence, rather than requiring those who argue against the teapot to disprove it. This notion obviously translates to the God vs non-God dispute. Consequently, if a religion's primary evidence is through the religion itself, then any alternate belief should be considered equally verifiable.

This little teapot has laid the foundations for several parody theologies, such as the Invisible Pink Unicorn (a goddess, whom we must trust is pink because of our faith) and Last Thursdayism (which states that reality itself only persists for a week as a test for you, while your every memory is pre-programmed and all your so-called friends are in on it). What makes these theories so wonderful is that they are as scientifically sound as any Abrahamic God, which was exactly Bobby Henderson's launching point. If he believed in the Flying Spaghetti Monster as the creator of our world, then why isn't he treated the same as other religious students? In the spirit of dogmatic equality, shouldn't his God be taught in schools too?

Once the internet got hold of this idea, it did what the internet always does: pushed the doctrine beyond the extremities of reason. With millions of clicks came millions of lightbulbs, and a cultural phenomenon exploded forth. The list of notable developments is extensive, from merch to marches to art to a comedy theatre production, all the while, everyone had only one question: Is this actually a religion? Or is it a satirical joke?

The answer is not that straightforward and depends on the individual. For many, the underlying validity is irrelevant; people should be allowed to worship however they choose without interrogation. The documentary I, Pastafari details the political campaign behind the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, where adherents seek the same legal privileges and tax exemptions as other major religions. Make no mistake, these followers are very serious about not being serious, because in their eyes, something as ridiculous as religion can only be overpowered by something equally ridiculous.

The rich sauce of the Flying Spaghetti Monster's concept has blessed us with numerous strings of talking points, but for me, nothing is funnier than the colander movement. In response to permitted religious headwear in ID photos, Pastafarians began donning pasta strainers as hats for their driving license photos. The vast majority of these attempts were rejected, but surprisingly, in some cases, it was legally granted. Again, it's easy to brush these off as foolish nonsense or even offensive attacks. But they bring about real conversations concerning applicable ideology in our modern era.

With the pasta flapping about across the world, eventually Bobby Henderson stepped back into the spotlight. Perhaps he felt obliged to clarify some details or attempt to unify the spaghetti strands into one bowl. Or perhaps the $80,000 advance from Villard Publishing had something to do with it. Either way, in 2006, Pastafarianism finally received the treatment all religions deserve: its very own sacred scripture, The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster.

When my copy arrived in the mail, I was already in hysterics before even opening it. On the front cover of the book was a picture of a book. Said book was The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster with its own cover design, but rather than using that design, they used an image of the book itself. It made me feel weird, which was a fantastic starting point for the hilarity up ahead. That said, while comedy is undoubtedly the main flavouring, the message is not as bluntly stupid as you might think.

For starters, Pastafarianism may be championed as some atheistic counterargument to the existence of God, but it is more accurately an agnostic philosophy. This is further solidified with Henderson himself, who was quoted as saying, "If there is a god and he's intelligent, then I would guess he has a sense of humour". Such a stance of uncertainty is far from the rigidity of atheism, and this book bends in whatever direction, just like any well-cooked pasta should.

The Flying Spaghetti Monster is proposed as a full-fledged deity, a replacement for the traditional God. This in itself does not make a case against creationism but actually perpetuates it through the satire. Evolution and science are seen as faulty teachings, placed here by the Flying Spaghetti Monster to test us.

Perhaps I seek too deeply, but I caught frequent underlying tones which made some serious cases in the quantum mysticism vein. For one example, the belief that evolution is "guided by his noodly appendages" creates a platform for science and the supernatural to coexist, which is a common stance among modern spiritual thinkers. Another example is where this Gospel states that every time we measure carbon-dating, the Flying Spaghetti Monster meddles with the results to ensure we do not discover the truth. This echoes the observer effect, whereby the detection of matter disturbs the output.

Nevertheless, absurdist fun remains the true fuel which blasts this short book to the end. It proposes outlandish theories and then does a pretty decent job at providing convincing arguments for them. There are also many images with the Flying Spaghetti Monster shoved into classic art or historical photographs. Finally, it would be blasphemous of me not to mention pirates, who are lauded as divine beings and the original Pastafarians. This statement is supported by an accurate graph showing how the global decline in piracy directly correlates with an increase in climate change. Coincidence? Who is to say? The scientists? You can't trust those guys!

If there is one thing the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster excels at above any theology I've come across is its use of puns, "consPiracy" as a decent instance. Pastafarianism itself, of course, is a portmanteau of pasta and Rastafarianism. Continuing the trend, they celebrate holidays such as Pastover and Ramendan (plays on the Jewish Passover and Islamic Ramadan, respectively) where adherents are encouraged to eat copious amounts of pasta or fast on a diet of ramen noodles exclusively. Every Friday is also considered a holy day, in which prayers of thanks are concluded with R'amen rather than Amen. Meanwhile, Christmas celebrations are referred to simply as the all-inclusive "Holiday".

Another key feature of every religion is its afterlife theories, and Pastafarianism has its own unique brand. First, there is Heaven, which revolves around a beer volcano and a stripper factory. But then there is Hell, which is... exactly the same, except the beer is old and the strippers are riddled with STIs. Oh no!

If these concepts appear problematic to you, then you have successfully noted this "scripture's" greatest downfall: it has dated badly. Life was different in 2006, and punching down in comedy was perfectly acceptable. This book insults little people (freely referring to them as the M-word), and it is shamelessly fatphobic. Truly, these are the cheapest shots one can take for a laugh, and I cringed through each of them. Similarly, this Gospel pokes at various celebrities who were big names back in that day, yet hardly register in contemporary relevance. Such factors weigh heavily on the overall experience, primarily due to any lack of foresight. How can we even jokingly argue for this as a holy text when it's already lost its pertinence after two short decades? Meanwhile, the Bible and Quran may be archaic from their environments, yet they persist as timelessly profound works. Is this perhaps the strongest argument we have against the equal rights of the Flying Spaghetti Monster after all?

Those gripes aside, Pastafarianism still warrants much respect in the theological pot. For starters, nobody has been murdered in its name, which is always a go-to selling point for New Religious Movements. More importantly, I appreciate how my anticipation of some agenda punchline never came, the book really sticking to its philosophy that there is a legit noodly creator behind all of this. And finally, their best defence is that pasta is amazing. Perfect even. Plus, the beer worship goes a long way. Super carby church. I'm into it. It's a beautiful thing.

And that's the silly side of the atheistic analysis out of the way! I hope you enjoyed it! Now prepare yourself as I grow horns and lock them into the most famous atheist in the world: Richard Dawkins. Because while his work may be lauded as the pinnacle of anti-God assertions, I honestly consider him to be more full of shit than the Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster itself.

That Lamb Prophecy

The God Delusion


Within six pages of The God Delusion's first chapter, I was ready to throw it away. I knew Dawkins' basic atheistic argument from interviews with the man, and I had a semi-good idea of the factors with which I disagreed. But then, right there, so soon in those earliest paragraphs, he confessed in black and white that he was aware of his shortcomings.

Richard Dawkins does not not believe in God.
Instead, Dawkins doesn't believe in a supernatural personal being.

It's the same debate I've had with every atheist I've ever met (likely owing to the fact that every atheist I've ever met reads Dawkins as if it were scripture). This has nothing to do with a "God Delusion". This has everything to do with the "Yahweh Delusion" or perhaps the "Allah Delusion" if you're brave enough. It does not take into account the BILLIONS of people who believe in God, but not those specific gods either.

The smartest movement on the topic I've come across is called "ignosticism" (or "theological noncognitivism"). It proposes that, since God has never been universally defined, it is ridiculous to state it exists or doesn't exist, because we don't even know what it is. If forced to define it, God is generally supposed to encompass something infinite, omnipresent, and eternal, which in itself only increases the limitlessness of its description. Spend some time in the east and speak to the people there. Ask if they believe in God, and most will say they do. Then ask them whether they believe in the God that Dawkins describes, and most will say they don't. I, too, land in this category. My stance will become more apparent as we go along, but let me preempt it by saying that I do have an inkling about "God", and not a single point in Dawkins' tirade was relevant to my understanding.

Why I struggle with atheists is that they define the undefinable only so that they can argue against its existence. They do so in order to attack one demographic: the Abrahamic believers (Jewish, Christians, and Muslims). What they don't realise is that they are exactly the same as those people, just the other side of the coin. Here, two groups are shoving something into a box and then shouting at one another about that box, while the rest of us watch, shaking our heads. And yet, even if I were to join this ridiculous box squabble, I'd still have a difficult time siding with Dawkins.

The truth is that even within major religions, there are ample branches to choose from. Of course, for reasons of sensationalism and marketing, Dawkins has opted for the worst of the worst (which hardly constitutes the majority of anything) and then rubs it raw. This has led to written death threats from religious nutters because, in a massive pool of four billion Abrahamic-following humans worldwide, a small handful of nutters naturally exist. Those extreme letters are then printed in the book. They are exploited by the author as a representation of the faith. Dawkins himself actually admits that most letters he receives from religious people are "friendly", but we don't get to read those. They don't fit his agenda.

As you'd expect, acts of religious terrorism are also delightfully weaponised by Dawkins. He takes immense joy as he highlights brief moments in history when a small gang of terrorists caused horrific violence disguised beneath the name of their dogma. Of course, if you're smart enough, you'll know that this is obviously not a reflection on any religion. If you had to ask every person of faith around the world what they thought about these destructive acts, I'd be willing to bet that 100% of them (rounded up to the nearest whole number) would agree that such things were against their core belief system.

You can split society into any categories you like, and within each, there will always be a rotten egg waiting to crack. Religion is one of the most susceptible topics because it has been around since documented human existence and continues to reach an uncountable number of people today. It is an effortless exercise to cherry-pick horrific examples of where it all went wrong, but we must not forget that these are rare in the greater scheme. They do not reflect religion whatsoever. Instead, what we are looking at are the mentally ill, who should be defined by the contents of their skull, not their self-proclaimed associations.

But every atheist is a model citizen, right? Richard Dawkins actually says as much: "I do not believe there is an atheist in the world who would bulldoze Mecca". Oh really? Really? Not a single atheist on the planet would want to do that? What are you basing this statement on, Richard? Your wet finger in the wind? Have you asked this question to every atheist who ever lived? Wait, didn't the militant atheism group, the Albanian Communist Regime, destroy thousands of mosques and churches? Didn't Stalin bulldoze thousands of religious buildings? Didn't Pol Pot make religion illegal and execute thousands of monks (along with tens of millions of other people)? I have spoken to some atheists who have said things that would blow your mind, Dawkins. What's more, they adore you.

For a while, I was reading these pages and almost felt like forgiving Dawkins for his ignorance. Perhaps, as with most atheists, he isn't aware that every Christian or Muslim aren't exactly identical, and within these faiths, even the understanding of God differs vastly, especially in terms of mysticism. But then he'll let it slip that he knew that all along. For example, he provides a short list of Gnostic texts that weren't included in the Bible, acknowledging that there are Christian sects that offer alternative theories about God. Therefore, he's loudly confessing that his book is a performance in specifically targeting one tiny sector of a massive theology. Of course, he'll never dare hang around such topics long enough for it to sink in. Otherwise, his cult fanbase would crumble.

And yet... AND YET... even if I were to continue to dumb myself down to meet him on his level, I can still fray his thread and wrap it around my little finger. Upon closer inspection, while Dawkins appears to be focused on the Abrahamic timeline, there is a lot of additional selectiveness going on. For starters, he'll rip into the Bible but steer clear of the Quran, which is hilarious. You scared, boy? But then, even when he moves into the New Testament, he has little to say. In fact, he reluctantly mutters some really nice things about Jesus, agreeing that the man was a pioneer of ethics and peaceful activism. Dawkins tries his best to nitpick it, but ultimately, he always reverts to an attack on the Jewish Bible/Old Testament.

To criticise Christians using the Old Testament makes about as much sense as criticising Muslims using the Bible. They are developments from the former, and some might argue that the divergences are their greatest features. But because it's the loudest ammunition he has, Dawkins obsesses over this specific ancient scripture, proclaiming that anyone who utilises the Old Testament as a modern moral compass is wrong. Well, I agree! But is anybody you know doing so? Most Christians and even Jews in our modern era disregard (or are even ignorant of) the most violent teachings of these writings. The majority of people can grasp when something is a product of its era. The same can be said about the ample Muslims who soften certain passages of the Quran through a contemporary lens. Sometimes, instructions change and become less applicable to current society because we've evolved.

These days, the most astute theological scholars agree that ancient religious stories, from those of indigenous tribes to the Ancient Greeks to, yes, even the Bible, were allegorical. Their intentions were to convey knowledge in a more accessible format. Do you think Dawkins is aware of this allegory theory? He actually is! And he counters the hypothesis by saying it has "good intentions" and that is the end of his argument against allegory, done.

It's about here that we start to see that this book's problems don't only pertain to Dawkins' theories, but his person too. I picked up The God Delusion expecting an intelligent and professional man debating in opposition to God. What I found was a condescending and dismissive prick with zero class. Selective research is one thing, but when he refers to his critics as "fleas", I find it extremely distasteful. When discussing people who've seen or heard spiritual things, his suggestion is that they are hallucinating, and that's enough for him to move on. I agree that perhaps they are hallucinating. It's healthy to theorise. But it's not beneficial to use these theories to assert conclusions. Dawkins will be the quickest to say God is a theory. So, in what world can you use a theory to defeat a theory and then proceed satisfied? What makes your position superior? Especially considering that your mental assumptions are being used against their first-hand experiences?

I have such a long list of related complaints that I'm unsure how much I could write about before I bore you. Dawkins uses science to explain how moths fly into flames as a misfiring of evolution, and then suddenly, that becomes the go-to analogy for religion. He uses the image several times like it's a directly proven comparison despite there being no scientifically proposed connection whatsoever. I remember when I read David Icke's work, he'd use the same technique.

Dawkins claims that the only reason belief in God persists is that it is indoctrinated into us as kids. But that does not explain why so many of my Christian-raised friends became atheists or, conversely, people like me who found "God"-ish independently. Spirituality comes to people in all manners of life, and every single combination of indoctrination vs. rebellion exists in ample amounts. While I'm sure Dawkins' proposal covers certain experiences, his one-size-fits-all statement is careless at best, manipulative at worst, or just plain stupid all around.

When speaking about studies made on firing neurons, Dawkins presents the results where mental reactions to religious discovery are identical to those when falling in love. He then abruptly claims religion must be a mind virus that has evolved to exploit the love neurons. Excuse me? Based? On??? WHAT????? Has he ever thought that maybe discovering God is literally the exact same brain process as falling in love, and it's as simple as that? Why do you have to make up a mind virus just to suit your narrative?

Dawkins dedicates so much time to the lazy hypotheses that God is just an adult version of imaginary friends, without pausing to ask anyone who has had an imaginary friend and believes in God if there's a difference. Let me assure you that there is.

To illustrate narrow-mindedness, Dawkins uses the image of a burka, comparing the eye-slit to ignorance. I'm sure he chuckled to himself when he wrote it, thinking he was so clever as he made this indirect attack on Muslim women. I personally think it was unnecessarily offensive.

Another topic is dualism. Adherents (such as myself) believe that our reality is composed of (at least) two substances: the physical material and an underlying metaphysical electrical substance (aka spiritual). Dawkins observes that dualists consider the brain and the mind to be fundamentally different. We do. He then states that these same people consider illness to be simply bad spirits. Now I ask you, as a dualist, with tears in my eyes, in what fucking world is that necessarily a dualist belief???? I certainly don't believe that. Where is he getting this from? And then he'll continue by asserting that fictional concepts, such as those found in Parent Trap, where a mind is transferred into someone else's head, are wholly feasible according to a dualist. And, it's like... no, it isn't. You don't know what you are talking about, so why are you even talking? What's worse is that atheists around the globe are no doubt gobbling this up as if it were gospel.

Why are so many artistic pieces Christian-themed? According to Dawkins, because there's money in it, and that's all. Why were the greatest minds in Western history Christian? According to Dawkins, it was the status quo, and that's all. Now, am I saying he's wrong? No. I'm saying this is a hypothesis, with likely some truth to it, but definitely not a blanket fact. And yet, Dawkins states it as an absolute certainty. Oh, but I thought the entire atheism argument was dependent on verifiable proof? Surely, if your conclusion relies on an assumption, then that negates the very bedrock of your viewpoint?

Gradually, we're starting to see what The God Delusion is. This is not a scientific study. This is the Richard Dawkins Show, where all we get are his thoughts and his conclusions, wrapped up in a snide use of language. This book is essentially just one guy admitting that "I don't get this thing, so here are a bunch of reasons why I think it's dumb", none of which ever touch on the joy and fulfilment of spirituality that has nothing to do with organised religion. His rationale is frequently, "I doubt it" or "let me assure you", and I implore you to count how many times he says such phrases.

Even more worrying is that feels personal. He's so obsessed with something not existing that he's started foundations about it. He talks about the danger of strong conviction, completely unaware of the irony that is himself. And without a doubt, he has a mission to actively try to convert people to atheism like some moral duty. Remind you of anything?

And here is where it gets really interesting.

Richard Dawkins thinks he is an atheist, but he is not. I've already touched on this earlier, but now we're going to delve into the muck with trumpets blaring.

Throughout this book, Dawkins forces a distinction between "God" (aka Yahweh/Allah) and what he hilariously refers to as "Einstein's God". If you know your stuff, these layers of terminology are extremely funny because Einstein frequently referred to God as "Spinoza's God". That is in respect to Baruch Spinoza, a Dutch philosopher who famously became known as the founder of Pantheism in the 17th century. The hysterics pile on even further when you learn the genuine history behind this title.

Perhaps not by name but in practice, Pantheism predates every religious organisation of which you have ever heard. Numerous indigenous beliefs worldwide incorporate elements of Pantheism. Brahman, the highest entity in Vedic/Hindu religions, is Pantheistic (1500–500 BC), as is the Dao in Daoism (450–300 BC). What Pantheism asserts is that the Universe itself is divine. The collection of absolutely everything is a singular system of which we are merely a part. You can call this collective entity anything you like. Some prefer nature or the cosmos. But for many of us, myself included, Spinoza included, Einstein included, that's God.

As if it's an insult, Dawkins includes the following quote from Steven Weinberg: "Some people have views of God that are so broad and flexible that it is inevitable that they will find God wherever they look for him. One hears it said that 'God is the ultimate' or 'God is our better nature' or 'God is the Universe.' Of course, like any other word, the word 'God' can be given any meaning we like. If you want to say that 'God is energy,' then you can find God in a lump of coal." Yes, that is completely correct. God is in the lump of coal, God is the lump of coal, God is the hand holding the coal, the mind perceiving the coal, the Sun shining down onto the coal, the baby laughing over here, the cancer growing over there, the encompassing absolute everything of everything, evolving together as a unified organisation up to this very second, living through us and as us. If you wish to focus on the coal, that's not wrong. But it's a strange choice that says more about you than God.

So when Richard Dawkins asserts that "God doesn't exist" to a Pantheist, what we hear is "the Universe doesn't exist", which is why so many of us consider atheism to be ludicrous. Except that Dawkins is careful around the topic to the point that he is actually on our side. In his exact words, "Pantheism is sexed-up atheism." This is viciously insulting. Not only does he laud the belief, but he also has the audacity to claim it under his own umbrella. According to Dawkins, I, Jared Woods, am, in fact, an atheist. So how does that work? Can an atheist now agree with the existence of the highest God from Hinduism? The God of Mahāyāna Buddhism? The God of Neoplatonism? The God of various Native American religions? The God of numerous traditional African religions? The God of certain Maori philosophies? A vast spectrum of God's definition across ages and countries? Any God is fine as long as it's not Abrahamic?

But wait! Even that is untrue! Because the Pantheistic God is also found in deeper Abrahamics, especially in regard to mysticism. Jewish Kabbalah? Christian Gnosticism? Islamic Sufism? Each easily regarded as Pantheistic, and that's only to name the most popular. So again, do Dawkins' atheists believe God doesn't exist? No. Do they believe the God they've put into a box doesn't exist? Not even that, no. It's a box inside a box at this stage. The boundaries of a single religion are too vast to contain it. You've got to keep slicing it smaller, smaller, smaller.
As I've said, The God Delusion should be called The Yahweh Delusion, but even better title suggestions would be The God Delusion Delusion or perhaps Richard Dawkins' Delusions. He's an atheist, but not actually, just against Abrahamic, but not actually, just against a tiny fraction of the Abrahamics, but actually, that doesn't quite get there either. The title of Chapter 4 says more than the entire book: "Why there almost certainly is no God". Hey, now! Would you look at that word! Almost! Even the world's biggest atheist can't commit.

Of course, that doesn't stop Richard Dawkins' spiritual rampage, and besides self-proclaiming Pantheism as part of his team, he does the same with people. Einstein is particularly violated as Dawkins claims without reference that "Einstein was using 'God' in a purely metaphorical, poetic sense". He even labels the man an "atheistic scientist", which is sooooo far from the truth. Einstein vocally rejected atheism and spoke about God freely. He encouraged science and religion working together, said he understood God as the laws of the Universe, and when pushed, would settle on some sort of Pantheistic agnosticism (exactly like me!).

"If there is any such concept as a God, it is a subtle spirit, not an image of a man that so many have fixed in their minds. In essence, my religion consists of a humble admiration for this illimitable superior spirit that reveals itself in the slight details that we are able to perceive with our frail and feeble minds." - Albert Einstein.

When you start analysing the smartest people within the scientific field, you will find they are all agnostics. Anyone who seeks knowledge would never come to an inconclusive conclusion, because then the questions end. That is what separates Dawkins from the true pioneers of human thought, yet he still perverts them for his gain. For example, this book is filled with Carl Sagan quotes, as if Carl Sagan were an atheist. But Carl Sagan was an agnostic who also leaned into Pantheism.

"An atheist is someone who is certain that God does not exist, someone who has compelling evidence against the existence of God. I know of no such compelling evidence. Because God can be relegated to remote times and places and to ultimate causes, we would have to know a great deal more about the Universe than we do now to be sure that no such God exists. To be certain of the existence of God and to be certain of the nonexistence of God seem to me to be the confident extremes in a subject so riddled with doubt and uncertainty as to inspire very little confidence indeed." - Carl Sagan

Looks like we've uncovered another of Dawkins' techniques: putting words into other people's mouths. Read the book for yourself and take note each time he makes a statement such as "I suspect so-and-so was an atheist", or "from this one can only deduce they were a type of atheist". Thomas Jefferson was so dedicated to the words of Jesus that he wrote the Jefferson Bible, a harmonisation of the four canonical Gospels, omitting the miraculous verses to grasp Christ's pure teachings. And what does Dawkins say about Jefferson? Well, because the man may (or may not) have claimed "no fear of death" that (according to Dawkins' logic) would indicate Jefferson "seems to have believed in no kind of afterlife", and therefore, "in the most unmistakable terms, he was not a Christian". How easy is it to play these leapfrog word games? Surely this is the very haphazard methodology a man of science would be fighting against?

It gets worse. If you think manipulating your hero's words to tune them to yourself is bad, wait until you hear how he treats those he dislikes. If there is a pope or a bishop in conversation, rest assured he'll dig out the most criminal detail about them to weaken their argument, no matter how irrelevant to the topic it may be. When it came to Christian theoretical physicist Freeman Dyson, Dawkins takes the liberty of INVENTING a speech for satirical purposes that erodes the man's beliefs (chapter 4: An Interlude at Cambridge). I want to emphasise this, so forgive me for repeating myself: DAWKINS LITERALLY FICTIONALISES QUOTES ATTRIBUTED TO A WORLD-RENOWNED SCIENTIST PURELY TO MAKE FUN OF HIS FAITH. The fact that he admits to doing so does not soften the blow. Oh, unless this is a comedy book? Is that what this is? Wait, it's starting to make sense!

Yet even if Dawkins played fair and only presented authentic quotes from atheists, it still does very little to prove anything. If you write a book with an agenda, you can find references that agree with you. It's that simple. I guarantee you there are full-on religious publications that achieve exactly what The God Delusion does, just on the other end of the scale. Using reputable sources and selective statistics, every single point can be counterargued in any text. That is why I am no longer interested in publications with such blatant motives. The world needs more teachings that present both sides and allow readers to reach their own conclusions. The God Delusion is not that. It's a spoon-fed feasting.

Nevertheless, nothing is ever all bad, and as I do not have any intentions of my own, I'll happily give props where props are deserved and agree wherever my opinion aligns.

Dawkins is certainly passionate, and while it's a complex subject, he does a superb job of explaining himself to any reading level. I'd often flare up in resistance to something he'd say, only to have him answer my question later down the line, which was impressive. It's obvious that he's been bombarded from every angle by the worst of them and has built an extremely thorough system of rebuttals that are set for defence and offence at a moment's notice. That's understandable.

His chapter on the evolution of creationism was enjoyable, and I agree that creationism doesn't belong in schools unless as a side dish for intrigue's sake. Then again, I have never personally conversed with a religious person who argues against evolution, although perhaps he converses with different people, and I've just got lucky.

I also thought his chapter on morality was great, but I can't imagine many still believe that moral action and religious dedication are dependent on one another, given the abundance of contrary evidence. Seeking ethical guidance from an ancient book compiled during violent ages is a silly proposal, and I'm sure that in 2000 years' time, any surviving intelligent race will look back on our current era with a similar contempt. Nevertheless, if someone is inclined to murder but abstains due to the scary eye of God or post-death retribution, then that ultimately remains a positive result.

On that note, Dawkins frequently makes cases for religion without realising it. As an evolutionary biologist, his entire life's work is based on the Darwinian model, which clearly states that only the most purposeful of mechanisms can survive generations upon generations of adaptation. And yet, the concept of God has persisted across millennia. The Stone Age, the Age of Enlightenment, and our Digital Age all developed with faith merely changing shapes within them, and while the organisational side of religion may be fading, spirituality is alive and well. In simpler terms, to negate God is to negate natural selection itself. Of course, Dawkins runs miles spinning theories about this in his favour, but it stinks of desperation and is unsubstantiated. His vague conclusion on this topic was that "it must be a by-product of something". Yes, Richard. Some of us already know what that something is, but you never will.

Sometimes Dawkins comes close to breaking through, but his mental blockades prove too strong. For example, he rambles on about the possibility of intelligent life out there and about how we may make contact one day. In such an event, these extraterristrials would seem like gods to us. Well, allow me to bring the kicker: there is a theory across multiple religious interpretations that this is exactly what happened. Aliens came to Earth, meddled with our DNA, and that is what the scriptures are largely referring to. I am not saying this is the truth. What I am saying is that this is a workable notion that functions within Dawkins' limited understanding, in which the "God" we speak about may have existed in a scientifically plausible way. And suppose these aliens returned and told us as much? In that case, the religious people would shout, "We told you He existed!" and the atheist people would shout, "We told you he didn't exist!" and we'll be right back where we started: two opinions on one coin, the same object unaware of itself.

Which leads us to the biggest God Delusion victims of them all: the atheist community. Between every line of Dawkins' cocky half-truths, I can hear the non-believers cheering, completely unaware of the mental mechanics at work. The undefinable concept of God is squashed into a tiny scope so it can be easier beaten. They have drawn their conclusions, and using a book like this as their pistol, they'll shoot down anything that threatens their preconceptions. Hilariously, this is the exact same approach religious people follow. In all honesty, only the agnostics can read any religious or anti-religious literature properly, for we are the only ones who can see that in a world of unknowns, anyone who chooses a side is full of shit.

In fairness to this book, it was originally published in 2006, and in our fast-moving world, that was a long time ago. When it first came out, it probably contained some advanced thinking. In that way, it provides a snapshot of atheism sitting elsewhere, and one cannot underestimate the role The Gold Delusion has played in pushing the discussion forward. But we've moved far ahead now.

Once upon a time, atheism was considered the (non)belief system of the rational, whereby the basic requirement for Universal Law was scientific foundations; otherwise, it was disregarded. From this angle, atheism was lauded as an inner circle for the minority intelligent who did not fall prey to superstition. Yet, that is no longer the case. In a growing number of countries, "no religion" is the dominant tick on the census, such as in Estonia (58.6%), the Netherlands (56%), New Zealand (51.6%), and the Czech Republic (47.8%). These stats continue to rise, showing how rapidly the trend has changed. This means that atheism can no longer claim to corroborate with the higher IQ or educated elite. In the aforementioned countries, those statistics would include the average and even some of the below-average intelligence groups into the mix. Conversely, I have found that the most forward thinkers these days are drawing parallels between quantum science and ancient mysticism, which are suspiciously alike. At risk of repeating myself to death: only the agnostics are able to progress unhindered. In regards to someone like Dawkins, the accolades showered upon his atheistic persona have glued him into place, and ironically, this evolutionist cannot evolve past it. So many of us have now left him and his little book behind.

The thick line Dawkins (and others) draw between science and God while laughing off any attempt to reconcile them is counterproductive. For me, the jury is still out on God's existence, but if you are demanding evidence, the proposal for God is stronger and more measurably scientific than against. For example, when the medical industry does clinical trials for depression drugs, how do you think they assess the results? It is a self-reporting system in which the receiver completes a questionnaire about how they are feeling, and the study notes the changes. This is considered scientifically sound. If a large number of people concur on similar mental effects, the drug can be deemed successful. So, imagine a medicine so powerful that billions upon billions of people across history have reported positive change in their lives? That is belief in God. An atheist is someone who says, "because this drug does not work on me, it is obviously not authentic", or even worse, "I refuse to take this drug, so why can't I see any effects?"

Whether I believe in God or not is secondary to my stern belief in fighting for the underdog. There was a time when atheism needed extra hands, and I would've stood up for them too. But that is no longer the case, and we can now focus on preserving the good things of spirituality and, in turn, nurture that side of evolution which would be beneficial to society going forward.

If "God" (whatever that means) scares you or amuses you or evokes nothing whatsoever, that is your journey. Many of us are so fortunate to live in countries where such a stance is largely acceptable. However, that does not make you the king of the castle. Religious intolerance is a form of prejudice and discrimination, of which Dawkins is undeniably guilty. In Chapter 8, "What's wrong with religion? Why be so hostile?" he clearly states he is against religion as a whole because it can lead to extremism. This is the worst form of reverse generalisation. It forces the vast majority into a tiny minority. There are extremist versions of everything, including environmentalists and advocates for the freedom of speech. That does not mean their core messages should be wiped off the Earth. Yes, planes have flown into buildings and bombs have detonated on trains, but do you think that religion was the sole reason? Or was it perhaps the most convenient scapegoat? It is my opinion that territorial disputes and political disruptions will occasionally manifest in violence regardless, and while religion provides an easy excuse, these acts would continue with or without them.

To end on a positive note: the greatest compliment I can give The God Delusion is that it's essential reading. It doesn't matter whether you're pro-religion or anti-religion, the ammunition this book provides is priceless, and where an atheist could have perhaps once caught me off guard, I am now armed and ready for that debate. It may have been one of the thickest wads of excrement I've ever endured, but it was far from a waste of my time.


The God Delusion, of course, mentions The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster in a glowing light. It is a holy text after all. So, as is customary, the rest of this blog piece will feature extracts from the Pastafarian sacred book, complete with my two cents on each. However, it's such a short read that you might as well complete the thing yourself. You can read the full Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster here.

Also, don't forget to check out my own spiritual philosophy, Janthopoyism! We may lean a little more toward God, but at least we avoid defining it.

Ok, and away we go!


Janthopoyism: Your New Religion


The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster Analysis


DISCLAIMER

WHILE PASTAFARIANISM IS the only religion based on empirical evidence, it should also be noted that this is a faith-based book. Attentive readers will note numerous holes and contradictions throughout the text; they will even find blatant lies and exaggerations. These have been placed there to test the reader's faith.

Parody in the purest sense. Any contradiction is placed here to test our faith. The invincible forcefield.

Disclaimer About Midgets
OUR RELIGION DOES NOT WISH to discriminate or cause hurt feelings among any group—and this is especially true of the very short, who, if provoked, could easily appear out of nowhere and attack. As a solution, we offer the following:
To prevent angering the little people community, we suggest that this book be placed on the very highest shelf possible.

Problematic on the first page. This type of humour doesn't land as well anymore.

A Letter from Bobby Henderson

What do we stand for?
• All that is good.
What are we against?
• All that isn't good.

While most religions would agree, I think it's wonderful to make this clear and simple statement from the beginning. I am on board.

THE BLUNDERS OF SCIENCE

The Need for Alternative Theories

Alternative theories must be taught in order to give our young students' minds a broad foundation.

No matter what happens, this will always be the entire basis of Pastafarianism.

What if it is He, pushing us down with His Noodly Appendages, that causes this force?

Alternative proposal for gravity. I could honestly not argue.

For further evidence of the true cause of gravity—that we are being pushed down by His Noodly Appendages—we need only look at our historical records. The average height of humans two thousand years ago was about five feet three inches for males, compared with an average height of around five feet ten inches for males today. Useless by itself, this information becomes quite important when viewed in terms of worldwide population. Humans, apparently obsessed with fucking, have increased their numbers exponentially over the years. We find, counterintuitively, that a small population correlates with shorter humans, and a larger population correlates with taller humans. 2 This only makes sense in light of the FSM theory of gravity. With more people on earth today, there are fewer Noodly Appendages to go around, so we each receive less touching—pushing down toward the earth—and thus, with less force downward, we're taller.

Again, flawless logic.

No one is saying that the FSM theory of gravity is necessarily true, but at the very least, it's based on sound science, sound enough to be included in the curriculum with the other nonproven theories. Until the currently taught theory of gravity, known as Newtonism, is proven as fact, alternatives should be taught as well.

We can already see that this is no ordinary attack. The ridiculousness of the Flying Spaghetti Monster will win because it exposes the ridiculousness of others. That's parody religion 101. What I didn't expect, however, was how they’d attack science so well, too!

An Alternative Viewpoint

Say you want to buy one of those new flatscreen TVs that are so popular these days. According to the opposing theories of ID and Evolution, you might acquire that TV in two very different ways:

1. You could assume, quite fairly, that Intelligent Designers from Sony, Toshiba, and Sharp are actively producing new and affordable forty-two-inch, high-definition flatscreen TVs, which are then boxed and shipped to the nearest Wal-Mart or Circuit City for you to purchase. Or . . .

2. You could wait several million years for a new flatscreen TV to evolve spontaneously from a "soup" composed of mud, DNA, and spare television parts. Once this happens, you might attempt to drag your new television out of a swamp and back to your house (or more likely, cave) before a stranger comes swinging out of a tree, kills you and your children, then inseminates your wife with his own seed.

It takes the FSM joke so far that it becomes an argument for intelligent design.

A number of scientists have been cited in defense of Evolution, but if we examine the situation more closely we begin to see a disturbing pattern.

Names like Darwin, Einstein, Carl Sagan, Stephen Jay Gould, Ernst Meyer—and many other scientists who 95 percent of the country have never heard of—are offered up as men who've supported Evolution. Yet you've never seen one of these so-called scientists publicly defending their theory. Why?

Answer: Because they're all dead.

HAHAHAHAHA.

Toward a New SuperScience

Even with satellite imagery and GPS navigation, scientists bound by the chains of empiricism have been unable to discover even a paltry 3 percent of the amount of new land that their supernatural-science counterparts found in an equal period of time. Scientists and explorers in the years 1400-1600 had few maps, only a compass, cross-staff, or astrolabe for navigation, and no motorized transportation. Yet even with these setbacks, they still managed to discover more than 14 million square kilometers of new, developable land. Clearly their openness to supernatural forces had something to do with their success, and we can only guess that they were guided to these newfound lands by some creature—most likely the Flying Spaghetti Monster, as historical art suggests.

The amount of land discovered during a less scientific age was more expansive, which, of course, favours the case of previous eras of worship.

It's only logical to assume that returning to balanced methods of science—natural theories and supernatural theories both—would allow us to find more land, something we greatly need for our growing population. More land means more resources, and more resources means fewer starving children. I can safely say, then, that anyone against the inclusion of supernatural theories into science wants children to starve. Such people obviously have no place in policymaking, and so I suggest that they get no say on the issue.

A lot of the verses I've included are just because they made me laugh, like this one.

The other possibility is that there are witches out there, hiding somewhere, plotting their revenge, liberally applying fireproofing compounds to themselves. And someday they may reappear and start causing trouble. And then what will our high and mighty scientists do? Throw calculators at them? Witches eat calculators.

Good to know.

What's the Matter with evolution?

Is Evolution going to somehow make my life more satisfying? Can Evolution put food on my table?
[...]
What is Evolution but the gradual change of species over a lengthy period of time as a result of various internal and external selective pressures? My grandfather, who is as old as dirt, has been through that. According to early lithographs, he was quite a looker in his day, but now, a century later, after years of hard drinking and working in the mines, he has no hair and looks like shit. Could Evolution just mean growing old?

I've highlighted two bits from this section, but honestly, it's all really funny and worth a read.

It is this process, scientists will tell you, that produced the platypus, the penguin, and the poodle—leading us to conclude that scientists are definitely full of shit. If someone can explain to me the adaptive traits of the "duckbill," then they can certainly tell me why the platypus is the only mammal on the planet that has one? Are platypii (pusses... who knows?) concerned with ingratiating themselves into local duck populations? Do they think that they're funny? Why the fuck do they have a bill?

Asking the real questions.

If we look at bacteria that grow resistant to antibiotics, insects that grow resistant to DDT, or even HIV that grows resistant to antiviral drugs, we see a fascinating correlation between "Natural Selection" and "resistance." But what are we really seeing here? I submit that they're not changing their genetic makeup, they're changing their minds. In short, they're getting smarter. If I go to your house and you feed me a shit sandwich two days in a row, I'm having lunch at McDonald's on the third day. It's that simple. Don't let the scientists, with their big phallic bacterial names, tell you anything different. They're not as smart as they pretend to be, no matter how much they try to demean so-called lower life forms.

Flawless logic.

And Evolution wasn't even properly invented until the late 1800s. Is that enough time to get a Labrador retriever from a dire wolf? I think not.

So true.

If we look at domestic cabbage, broccoli, kale, cauliflower, and brussels sprouts, are we to claim, even if they did originate from a common ancient wild cabbage, that selection, be it natural, artificial, whatever, could not have done better over the last few thousand years? The answer is written in the squinched-up face of every child with a brussels sprout in his or her mouth. Yet another strike against Evolution.

I am convinced.

They will tell you that humans and chimpanzees shared a common ancestor some five million years ago, and that we "diverged" from that common ancestor and eventually invented the space shuttle while chimpanzees were only able to invent "the stick." To support this thesis, scientists tell us that we share 95 percent of our DNA with chimpanzees, and yet we share 99.9 percent of our DNA with Pirates. 6 1 ask you, who is the more likely common ancestor? And are the Pirates not the Chosen People of the FSM? Why do we spend so much time talking about something that didn't happen, while the FSM is dangling His Noodly Appendage right in front of our faces?

Naturally leading into pirates now.

Fallacy: This is a remnant of an internal pouch used to ferment the hard-to-digest plant diets of our ancestors.

Fact: The appendix was a clever internal pouch utilized for hiding a Pirate's gold. It is also the inspiration for the saying "cough it up," which Pirates would demand of defeated Pirates once they'd boarded their ships.

This subsection (From Pirates to People) lists fallacies that are hit-or-miss. But this one was funny.

We are not saying that Evolution can't exist, only that it is guided by His Noodly Appendage. And our Spaghedeity is extremely modest. For some reason, He went through a great deal of trouble to make us believe that Evolution is true—masking the prominent role of Pirates in our origins, making monkeys seem more important than they really are, generally keeping behind the scenes and out of the spotlight.
In spite of His low profile, though, let no one doubt that the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster is not only a groundbreaking religion, but is also supported by hard science, making it probably the most unquestionably true theory ever put forth in the history of mankind. To make my point, I will turn to the modern-day problem of global warming.

It then proceeds to poke holes in everything. It includes a diagram showing how the decrease in the pirate population correlates with the increase in climate change. It uses the scientific method to make fun of the scientific method, which is what we like around here.

We have a different approach: FSM believers reject dogma. Which is not to say that we don't believe we're right. Obviously, we do. We simply reserve the right to change our beliefs based on new evidence or greater understanding of old evidence. Our rejection of dogma is so strong that we leave open the possibility that there is no Flying Spaghetti Monster at all. So, in a sense, you could say that we're extremely openminded—we could change our minds someday. All we ask is proof of His nonexistence.

Amazing. If every religion were like this, we would free ourselves of so many needless issues.

An Alternate Vision

we hereby state our belief that the universe is a result of "UNINTELLIGENT DESIGN" (UD).

Funny enough, this is Gnosticism.

FSM vs. ID, on Unlikely Alliance

But ask yourself this question: While "peer review" sounds like a good idea, is turning to one's peers for their opinions not the wrong way to go? Is it not the same as a woman asking her boyfriend, "Do I look fat in this blouse/dress/parka?" Regardless of the item of clothing being worn, the answer is a resounding "no, you look great" in 99.99 percent of all test cases. 2 As a consequence, we argue that the highly secretive "peer review" system is unfairly hardwired to reinforce the limited viewpoints of scientists and their close friends.

lolssss

Both sides have their points to make, but the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster proposes a simple answer that is more likely, and immensely more plausible, which is that the Flying Spaghetti Monster is altering our scientific data in an effort to mislead us. It's not the scientists' fault, for how could they know? The FSM is invisible and passes through normal matter with ease.
While our theory may sound a lot like Intelligent Design, there are important differences between ID and FSMism, the most important being that they are wrong and we are right.

Infallible! Literally the same as every religion, but at least this one sees the ridiculous.

Communion test

Both subjects had their vitals recorded before and after communion. Upon completion of the test, the Christian was found to be listless, with decreased heart rate, body temperature, and brain function. The Pastafarian recorded increased heart rate, body temperature, and brain function, commenting that he felt "full," which we interpreted to mean whole.

Hilarious "experiment" where they claim to have fed someone a load of communion wafers vs a load of pasta. As expected, the one who ate the pasta felt better afterwards.

Unified Spaghetti Theory

This chapter compares the creation of the world to pasta. It is worth reading in its entirety. DNA does look like fusilli pasta, it's true.

More evidence

We thought it would prove enlightening to look more closely at these institutes of higher learning and try to find some evidence of His Noodly Appendage at work.

There does appear to be a correlation between universities of higher learning and Ramen, as well as beer, the official drink of Pirates.

EXPLAINING PASTAFARIANISM

A Condensed History of the World

The universe appears to be expanding, much like cooked pasta.

Try deny it.

Earth was created in approximately 0.062831853 seconds and was similarly disguised to appear much older. We can be certain that the FSM spent even more time preparing the earth, because, being allknowing, He was well aware that soon enough there would be nosy people poking around everywhere. Known as "scientists," these nosy people have a sick need—probably sexually motivated—to figure out how things work, and so it was even more important that our apparent reality be well designed to hide the truth.

It's the "probably sexually motivated" that got me.

Regardless of the lies told about them, the first Pastafarians were peace-loving explorers and spreaders of goodwill, not bloodthirsty criminal Pirates. In fact, they were well known to distribute candy to passing children, thus establishing what is now known as Halloween.
Of course it was not all good times. Not everyone was a believer, and some rejected His Word and felt the need to go out on the ocean in their own (probably lame) ships and pick fights with the Pastafarians. Most notable was Noah, of biblical fame, who slapped together a monstrous barge made of wood and whatever else was around—probably dirt, who knows? Noah, well known for his love 3 of animals, always had plenty around. So when he found himself with a lack of building materials he decided to use hundreds of defenseless animals as ballast—mainly the slowest, dumbest, and most dense that he could come across.
It's not known exactly what occurred during this time of Noah and the Pirates, but enough historical texts have survived through the years to get a rough picture of the events that transpired. Noah, alone except for his animals/ballast, propelled by jealousy and maybe a group of talking seals, set forth in search of Pastafarians. Unfortunately for Noah, he found one of the most bad-ass Pirate ships around, and started talking way too much smack. The Pastafarians, being above all peaceful, and maybe drunk, ignored his verbal abuse. It was only when Noah, ever the dick, physically attacked the Pastafarian ship by hurling from his bow the pointiest of animals 4 that the Pastafarians took notice. We are told that the largest, scariest of the Pastafarians swam, or maybe just jumped, from ship to ship—they were that powerful—and confronted Noah.
Immediately seeing the error of his ways, Noah offered some turtles or something as a way of apologizing. The Pastafarians, probably having plenty of their own turtles, 5 said no deal, and proceeded to intimidate the bejesus out of Noah. We don't know exactly what was said, but it's clear that Noah wet himself to such an extent that even Christians associate him with "the Great Flood." 6 Needless to say, he never mistreated animals again—not even chickens, who are pretty much asking for it

Here is some pirate meets Bible history. The story of Noah appears again later in The Holy Noodle section.

Convinced of the inherent evil of Pirates, Hare Krishnas, who are descended from Ninjas, banded together at various seaports and declared a holy war against the Pirates.

The Hare Krishnas are bad guys in this mythology. That makes me sad tbh. I like them.

Most Celtic artwork resembles the FSM, which leads us to believe that many Pirates simply became druids. Also, there is a striking similarity between midgets and leprechauns.

Use this as you will.

Key Moments in FSM History

This is a fun chapter largely dependent on images that place the Flying Spaghetti Monster in cave art, hieroglyphs, Greek architecture, Renaissance art, the Declaration of Independence, the moon landing, etc. It makes some interesting points, for example, the Great Wall of China does resemble a noodly appendage!

Bobby Answers the Big Questions

An FAQ section. I have selected a handful of the most consequential here:

Q: If the FSM is benevolent, why do bad things happen to good people?
A: They may have angered Him, or it could be that He is too busy, or indifferent for whatever reason, to get involved. He works in mysterious ways that we are not always able to understand.

Q: Does He hear my prayers?
A: Yes, but that is not to say they will necessarily be answered. To increase your odds, it's recommended that you wear Pirate regalia or at least an eye patch.

Q: Are the other religions wrong?
A: No, they're just misguided. We accept converts from other religions with open arms.

Q: Are there male strippers in FSM Heaven for women?
A: Probably, but they are invisible to the non-homo guys.


WWAPD?

FIND THEE A WENCHI.
Or if you're a wench, find thee a Pirate!
Wenches and Pirates go together like spaghetti and spaghetti sauce*.
* So do same-sex Pirates, who are perfectly acceptable in Pirate culture.

Good to know that Pastafarianism supports the LGBTQ+ community.

The Holy Noodle

THEN THE FSM SAID, "Let there be light," and there was light.

As anticipated, this follows on with the creation story ala FSM. There is a more significant point here. That it's ripping off Genesis (much like so many do) says more about the Bible's power than anything else.

And let there be a volcano to spew forth beer, which seems like a benevolent idea." And the volcano spewed forth beer and He tasted it and declared it to be quite good.

Second Day of Creation: Enter the beer volcano, which I am into.

When the FSM awoke, his thoughts were muddled and He didn't know where He was. Slightly hungover, and somewhere out in the Indian Ocean, the FSM found himself a little confused about what He'd created the day before; and so, self-conscious about the previous night's misbehavior, He started barking Godlike orders in an attempt to reestablish His powerfulness, and then the FSM decided to organize.

Third Day of Creation.

Later that evening He rolled out of bed and landed hard on the firmament, and this, fair reader, was the true Big Bang. He had a funny feeling and realized in His drunken stupor that He had not only built a factory in Heaven that turned out scantily clad women in transparent high heels, but He'd also created a midget on earth, whom He called Man. And He said, "Wow. Even I might have overreached my Noodly Appendage on this one," and not even sure what day it was anymore, He decided to take an extended break from the whole creation gig, and He gave a quick blessing and declared, "From here on out, every Friday is a holiday."

Fifth Day of Creation. A "midget" was the first man, of course.

Before long, Man broke his damned tooth on that olive pit, and the FSM said, "What did I give you ears for if not to listen to me?" And Man said, "I have ears?" And he eventually located them on the sides of his head, but not before discovering a small Noodly Appendage between his legs, which he noticed was infinitely smaller than even the shortest of the FSM's appendages, and he realized that his woman appeared to be thinking the same thing, so the midget-man said, "Hand me one of those fig leaves, will you?"

Olive instead of apple, of which Man did not heed the warning about the hard seed. I do love the "Noodly Appendage between his legs" visual.

"Where are you?" Man said, "I heard you floating around over there, and I was afraid because I was naked; and I hid myself."
And the FSM said, "That's fine, but can you tell me where you hid those delicious breadsticks? I haven't eaten since the Creation."
"We ate them all," the midget-man lied. "There aren't any more breadsticks left."

Funny. It is massively a food religion, which is an untapped market.

1. I'd Really Rather You Didn't Act Like A Sanctimonious, Holier-ThanThou Ass When Describing My Noodly Goodness. If Some People Don't Believe In Me, That's Okay. Really, I'm Not That Vain. Besides, This Isn't About Them So Don't Change The Subject.

2. I'd Really Rather You Didn't Use My Existence As A Means To Oppress, Subjugate, Punish, Eviscerate, And/Or, You Know, Be Mean To Others. I Don't Require Sacrifices And Purity Is For Drinking Water, Not People.

3. I'd Really Rather You Didn't Judge People For The Way They Look, Or How They Dress, Or The Way They Talk, Or, Well, Just Play Nice, Okay? Oh, And Get This In Your Thick Heads: Woman = Person. Man = Person. Samey-Samey. One Is Not Better Than The Other, Unless We're Talking About Fashion And I'm Sorry, But I Gave That To Women And Some Guys Who Know The Difference Between Teal And Fuchsia.

4. I'd Really Rather You Didn't Indulge In Conduct That Offends Yourself, Or Your Willing, Consenting Partner Of Legal Age AND Mental Maturity. As For Anyone Who Might Object, I Think The Expression Is Go F*** Yourself, Unless They Find That Offensive In Which Case They Can Turn Off The TV For Once And Go For A Walk For A Change.

5. I'd Really Rather You Didn't Challenge The Bigoted, Misogynist, Hateful Ideas Of Others On An Empty Stomach. Eat, Then Go After The B******.

6. I'd Really Rather You Didn't Build Multimillion-Dollar Churches/ Temples/Mosques/Shrines To My Noodly Goodness When The Money Could Be Better Spent (Take Your Pick):
A. Ending Poverty
B. Curing Diseases
C. Living In Peace, Loving With Passion, And Lowering The Cost Of Cable I Might Be A Complex-Carbohydrate Omniscient Being, But I Enjoy The Simple Things In Life. I Ought To Know. I AM The Creator.

7. I'd Really Rather You Didn't Go Around Telling People I Talk To You. You're Not That Interesting. Get Over Yourself. And I Told You To Love Your Fellow Man, Can't You Take A Hint?

8. I'd Really Rather You Didn't Do Unto Others As You Would Have Them Do Unto You If You Are Into, Um, Stuff That Uses A Lot Of Leather/Lubricant/Las Vegas. If The Other Person Is Into It, However (Pursuant To #4), Then Have At It, Take Pictures, And For The Love Of Mike, Wear A CONDOM! Honestly, It's A Piece Of Rubber. If I Didn't Want It To Feel Good When You Did IT I Would Have Added Spikes, Or Something.

RAmen.

The eight "I'd Really Rather You Didn'ts" AKA the eight Condiments.

A History of Heretics

Useless pages offering brief fake biographies of figures like Da Vinci, Darwin, and Dolly the cloned sheep. Was almost funny at parts. Almost.

PROPAGANDA

The Pastafarion Guide to Propaganda

NOW THAT YOU KNOW some of the science and history behind Pastafarianism, you may feel that you're ready to go out and spread His Word. With this in mind, it is important to remember that one of the central ideas of FSMism is the idea of inclusion. Anyone can be a member, no matter their age, race, background, or even their religious affiliation. As we've stated earlier, we do not base our beliefs on dogma—if we did, we'd have to think that we're absolutely right about everything. Only assholes think that way. And Pastafarians are not assholes.

So remember, Pastafarians are not assholes. We simply deliver His Word and let the people decide.

With inclusion in mind, we feel it is necessary to approach members of other religions in an effort to show them our beliefs. It's possible that Christians, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, and all the other religions, except probably for Scientologists, may be willing to convert after hearing about FSMism. We welcome with open arms any members of other religions. And remember our guarantee:

Try us for thirty days and if you don't like us, your God will most likely take you hack.

This is an important detail in spreading His Word. If it works for infomercials, it will definitely work for religion. The God-back guarantee should always be offered up front. It shows that we're confident about our beliefs and helps to build trust. Trust is very important when you're trying to change somebody's beliefs. And since we're one of the few religions that's never threatened nonbelievers with violence, it's all we've got.

It felt necessary to steal this entire page. It's good stuff. Every religion could learn from it.

CHILDREN are generally not the brightest of people, and can be easily converted to FSMism. Mentioning Pirates will ensure it.

CELEBRITIES are an interesting matter. Consider them to be a special project. When an actor or musician adopts a religion it is a sure sign that it is going to be popular. As such, we suggest identifying one or two hot targets. Lindsay Lohan seems like she'd be open to Pastafarianism. Also, Madonna is probably up for a conversion soon. We suggest approaching those celebrities who appear to be starving. You might want to mention that a high-carbohydrate diet is just what they need to restore their physical and spiritual well-being.

Some guidance on demographic conversions.

And lastly, you might ask a moderate Christian a question that they've undoubtedly heard before. What would Jesus do?

We suggest that Jesus would have taken a look at the direction things are going and converted to FSMism. Our beliefs and rejection of dogma are much more consistent with his ideology than much of modern-day dogmatic Christianity. And we find it hard to believe that Jesus would approve of a great deal of the politics enacted ostensibly on his behalf. And he probably wouldn't take kindly to the wars that have been fought in his name either.

WWJD?
HWCTFSM.

Jesus Would Convert to FSM.
This is more true now than ever.

ISLAM is the world's second largest religion after Christianity. Granted, we don't see a lot of Muslims in this country, but we do see a lot of them on television. It seems that many of them live in places like Iraq and Afghanistan. This is interesting to note, because some of our greatest missionary work is taking place in these places, where there are a surprising number of Pastafarians in the military. While people believe that the president sent troops into Iraq to find WMDs, it's pretty much been common knowledge that most of the weapons they were supposedly looking for were over in Iran and North Korea. So why did he send so many troops to the wrong country? As you know, until recently, Iraq was a country run by a secular government, under the rule of Saddam Hussein. 1 0 High government officials in the United States predicted correctly that it would be easier to convert a secular country to Pastafarianism than it would be to convert, say, Iran. This program of bringing His Word to the people has been termed by the Pentagon as Operation Wiggly Multiappendaged Deity, or Operation WMD for short. As President Bush probably once said, "We are making progress in Iraq. But it's going to take time." Tune in to see how it goes.

One of those annoying parts that betray the era and geographical region of the writings, which erode at their timelessness and global appeal.

For Orthodox Jews, point out the tzitzit that they wear. Moses himself was told to wear one, and the strings do resemble His Noodly Appendages, so we can only assume that the Flying Spaghetti Monster made the suggestion in the first place.

Lol, true again.
This section has many more examples, one of my favourite conversion techniques being "offer them some Ramen". It makes total sense because Jains are starving and Rastas have munchies, etc.

Pamphlets

WHY YOU SHOULD CONVERT TO FLYING SPAGHETTI MONSTERISM
• Flimsy moral standards.
• Every Friday is a religious holiday.
• Our Heaven is WAY better. We've got a Stripper Factory AND a Beer Volcano.

Taken from their propaganda pamphlet.

Smart People Who Agree with Us
"One of the most exciting developments in physics recently is so-called string theory, in which all subatomic particles are described as microscopic vibrating strings. Obviously this is correct, though misnamed. As Noodle Theory reveals, He has created the matter in the universe in His own quivering image!"

"Clearly the FSM has aspects of both male and female, with both 'Noodly Appendages' and two round meatballs, which clearly represent the breasts of the Great Mother Goddess."

"As a neuroscientist and clinical psychologist, I have often been struck by how the brain resembles pasta."

More standout quotes taken from the propaganda pamphlet.

Swag

You have to wonder if sections like this were to fulfil some page minimum, but anyway, here you have instructions for creating your very own Pirate-Fish Stencil and Flying Spaghetti Monster Simulacrum. The former is made using rubber bands and actually looks pretty cool.

Fund-raising

If members don't want to contribute to the cause, they don't have to. Freeloaders will be welcome aboard the Ship—however they most certainly will not be allowed to touch the cannons. There has to be some motivation to contribute, after all.

Donating is not necessary. A lot of Pastafarianism funds are said to be used towards the building of a pirate ship. According to several interviews, Henderson was genuinely planning to do this, but I can't seem to find out whether he did.

A Guide to the Holidays

I've already covered most of these in the main text, but this is the section if you wish to learn more about their brilliantly named holidays such as PASTOVER (encouraged to eat copious amounts of pasta) and RAMENDAN ("fasting" by eating only Ramen noodles). I haven't mentioned INTERNATIONAL TALK LIKE A PIRATE DAY, which takes place on September 19. It wasn't invented by the Spaghetti Church but they've naturally adopted it into their canon.

Enlightenment Institute

A long but funny section with well-written essays arguing for FSM, including works (reportedly) authored by a mathematician, theologian, historian, and even "corporate proof". Worth a read.

Imagine a box of uncooked spaghetti. It's essentially a series of straight lines. A box of two hundred pieces of spaghetti has very low Kolgoromov complexity. You could easily compress the data contained in those two hundred pieces. Now imagine a plate of cooked spaghetti, complete with sauce and, if you like, meatballs. Imagine the process of untangling this mass. It would take hours to take each individual piece of spaghetti, clean off the sauce, and put it in its own separate place and pick out the meatballs. This plate of spaghetti, all tangled up and covered with delicious sauce has very high complexity. Spaghetti has the astounding property of being able to go from very low to very high complexity.

Strong observations from the essay "Life, Kolgoromov Complexity, and Delicious Spaghetti" by Nick Moran

A Final Note from Bobby Henderson and His Staff

It has been said that the best sauce requires an occasional stir or two—wiser words have seldom been spoken—and so we have done our best to stir the waters of belief in the hopes of converting just a few more Pirates to His Noodly Goodness.

This is how the book ends.

Ok, so that's done now! See you again in 2026! It will be an actual theological doctrine next time, I promise! :D




Wednesday, 18 December 2024

The Top 50 Albums of 2024


The Top 50 Albums of 2024
2024! Are you ready? Then lend me your ears! We've just started, and I've already dropped two corny jokes. Oops, there's another one! A-maize-zing (joke4).

So, guess what? This article marks my 15th year of writing these Top 50s. That not only accumulates into an incalculable amount of wasted hours but also lands at the midpoint of another half-decade, poof, gone. Are we in a position to start analysing what music was about in the 2020s? I'm gonna say... no. We need more data. Anything could happen. It kinda feels like nothing has happened except for Taylor Swift, all day, every day. We should be grateful. It is only a matter of time before the kids are bopping exclusively to AI-generated tunes crafted perfectly to milk their dopamine teets in ways human creativity can no longer achieve. We are witnessing the death of art, people.

Nevertheless, there are jabbers we can blabber about 2024 as a unit. I recall mid-year like it was yesterday because it feels as if this year was a week long. Around that period, I moaned to crowded Whatsapp groups about how unsatisfying music had been this round. I wasn't mad, just disappointed. I got the sense that there were no new artistic movements, no genre-defining evolutions, and no bonafide classics. It chugged along as a non-event, some ups, some downs, but no screams on the ride, merely straight faces on the souvenir photo at the end.

I no longer whine about such things.

I owe my change of heart to this very list, for only when compiling these 50 albums did I realise that 2024 was a rotation of consistency rather than landmarks. Yes, it may be true that I did not know my Top 10 months in advance (which is usually the case). But the magic came with my sleepless nights, grappling over which releases made the overall cut, with way more than 50 deserving the props. Alas, we have to commit at some point, so I trusted my traditional mantra. It's not about the records that are the most deserving or even the most talented. It's about the ones that impacted me, wedging themselves into my memory for better or worse. If you disagree, then congrats on the first step of recognising the subjectivity of art criticism. Post your own Top 50 in the comments. I will click. I am fascinated.

Speaking of memory, this is what I will remember as the defining characteristic of 2024: everyone did their best. As this list should accurately illustrate, there was a full scope of quality across genres without anyone falling behind or conquering the castle. For once, there wasn't a sense of obligation to wiggle in specific entries to represent a style. The cream rose to the top of the crop (joke5) on their own. That said, it was a particularly decent year for the rawer, heavier stuff (especially sludge), as well as super-long albums, much to my limited time's dismay.

Ok, so grab your popcorn (joke6) and lube your every orifice for 2024 in audio form. I listened to 370 albums this year, and you? It was less than desired but still sufficient. Here is a Spotify playlist of some of my favourite 2024 songs. And here are the official Top 50 Albums of 2024, according to me and anyone else with taste:


The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Allie X - Girl With No Face

50. Allie X - Girl With No Face

Synthpop
23 February 2024
Spotify


I distinctly remember trumpeting Allie X as an underrated goodie some years ago, but armed with Girl With No Face, my case has become bulletproof. She's genuinely found herself in a special area with this dark synth record, and while her sound is not pushing the line (it's an 80s retro aesthetic, if anything), the songs are well realised and peculiar, fitting in perfectly with The Now of our musical landscape, where sophisticated female-led pop is particularly strong. Off With Her Tits is also a fun title worth noting.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Duda Beat - Tara e tal

49. Duda Beat - Tara e tal

Alt-Dance-Pop
11 April 2024
Spotify


Tara e tal is unlike anything on this list. It’s an unapologetic good-mood dance album but not the fake serotonin-made-of-cheese type. Rather, it has its serious face on, refusing to break eye contact across the party, letting you know it’s not here to play around. Now zoom out, and you were at your desk this whole time with pages of work done, this album functioning as the ideal soundtrack to keep your focus balanced and your fingers clacking that keyboard. Wow, so many uses! And so many strong songs! Slap it on and see what happens!

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. MJ Lenderman - Manning Fireworks

48. MJ Lenderman - Manning Fireworks

Alt-Country Slacker Rock
6 September 2024
Spotify


By its very definition, slacker rock conjures images of lacklustre energy, which, when combined with the woe-filled storytelling of country music, reads like an aching bore on paper. If this is your perception, allow Manning Fireworks to single-handedly shift your views with well-composed songs punctuated by catchy choruses, knocking out line after line of emotional lyrics that are as bleak as they are humorous about their bleakness. Listen to Wristwatch for further clarification. If every year needs their country star, MJ Lenderman rips the spotlight down, not only here but also as the guitarist for Waxahatchee’s Tigers Blood, released several months earlier. 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Arooj Aftab - Night Reign

47. Arooj Aftab - Night Reign

Chamber Folk Jazz
31 May 2024
Spotify


Night Reign is aptly named as it’s best experienced nocturnally. The compositions are moods of utter darkness without being scary, instead lulling us into a hypnotic sleepy-by through celestial string work, light pitter-pattern percussion, and Arooj’s pacifying vocals that present her calming words in her native Pakistan language, Urdu. Part of my reason for including it on this list is that it pokes above 2024’s musical terrain as if an enchanted tree in the desert, an instant attention-catcher, unlike any other surrounding offerings. Another reason is that it’s like discovering a jar of pure spirituality, and I was hoping you could open it up and take a deep whiff of this stuff. Join me.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. This Could Be Texas

46. English Teacher - This Could Be Texas

Indie Art Rock
12 April 2024
Spotify


You can tell a lot about a band’s creativity by their song titles. With English Teacher, for example, such poetic prizes as “I’m Not Crying, You’re Crying”, “Not Everybody Gets to Go to Space”, and “Sideboob” let you know that you’re in funny company. Furthermore, there’s “The World’s Biggest Paving Slab”, another intriguing row of words which adorn one of the most fun rock songs of the year. Now, mix this quirky attitude with artsy arrangements, punky posts, and a dash of progginess, and you’ll find something quintessentially British that pushes a small indie envelope somewhere. Oh, and congrats on the Mercury Prize, btw! I was happy about that. 

That Lamb Prophecy

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Amaro Freitas - Y'Y

45. Amaro Freitas - Y'Y

Third Stream Post-Minimalism
1 March 2024
Spotify


Amaro Freitas impresses me because he knows how to caress his keys with dainty precision and then to smash them into hard darkness, drastically shifting the vibe but never abruptly, just a smooth transition taking you for a ride. Minimalism for the sake of minimalism can become a vacant drag, but Y'Y fills the void with an organic spirituality that zips by as something wholly unique on this list. 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Joanne Robertson & Dean Blunt - Backstage Raver

44. Joanne Robertson & Dean Blunt - Backstage Raver

Dream Pop Slowcore
16 May 2024
Spotify


Dream thick in a mess of lofi. So minimal, so soothing, so real. The lethargy is too weighty, the songs fall apart, even the singer from Iceage can't save it. For just under 18 minutes, I am paused. Backstage Raver, I love you from a slightly different plain than what I feel for anything else this year. 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. SENTRIES - Snow as a Metaphor for Death

43. SENTRIES - Snow as a Metaphor for Death

Post-Hardcore Noise Rock
19 January 2024
Spotify


With an album title like that, how could you possibly go wrong? SENTRIES’ sophomore is a total genre player, the guitar riffs jarring from one raw style to the next while the vocalist mumbles in monotone, then SCREAAAMS into the white hiss above. Songs such as Performance Art and Witches shatter their way to the top of my 2024 noise rock love letters, and I remain grateful that no matter the year, there is always a post-hardcore album armed and ready to represent. 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Joey Valence & Brae - No Hands

42. Joey Valence & Brae - No Hands

Hardcore East Coast Hip Hop
7 June 2024
Spotify


The first ten seconds of No Hands already got me shouting, "OH SHIIIIT, that's how you start an album, son!" and then I'm bopping, I'm bopping, I'm bopping, and 30 minutes later, I'm like, "That's how you make an East Coast hip hop album, soooonnny boiiiii!!!" Of course, this outfit owes their everything to the book The Beastie Boys wrote all those decades ago, but let's think about that for a moment... The Beastie Boys are gone. There is a monumental hole in the genre. And if Joey Valence & Brae want a shot at filling that gap, I say, let them eat cake. More people need to rip on the Beasties, to be honest, especially when they flaunt the knack of capturing the playful humour and boom-bappy beats as proficiently as this. Shout out to the Danny Brown feature, too. He slots effortlessly into this world. 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Sadness - Your Perfect Hands and My Repeated Words

41. Sadness - Your Perfect Hands and My Repeated Words

Emo Shoegaze
23 August 2024
Spotify


So here’s the thing about this entry: it is more than an album. It is a representative of the artist’s complete 2024 output. Within a single week in August, not one but three Sadness records dropped onto our plates, and while I stand by Your Perfect Hands and My Repeated Words as the finest, we should collectively treat them as one fairly cohesive body of work where each deserves its place (the other two being I Want to Make Something As Beautiful As You and I Love You). By alternating between layers of almost childlike vocals and drawn-out instrumental sections, these musical landscapes are the ideal type of shoegaze/dream pop, accurately expressing the emotion of love: where the yearning for That Thing is achingly sad but also so euphorically uplifting. The song Lowsun Bridge alone warrants this choice, as it is up there with 2024’s most gorgeous treasures. 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Sadness - death's dynamic shroud.wmv & Galen Tipton - You Like Music

40. death's dynamic shroud.wmv & Galen Tipton - You Like Music

Deconstructed Club
March 15, 2024
Spotify


The most exciting and simultaneously most annoying aspect about Death's Dynamic Shroud is how productive they are, releasing an incalculable amount of albums and mixtapes since 2014, but by my count, above 60. Moreover, their style does not stagnate, evolving at such a dizzying pace that as soon as you love what they're doing, it's too late; they've already moved on. Still, as my path wonks off in one direction and theirs in another, we meet every now and again (occasionally even at #1), and on You Like Music, I am grateful for this brief moment of fist-bumping. As a collaborative effort with Galen Tipton, I'm unsure who is responsible for what, but the full-on surreal drugginess of immensely detailed IDM is my type of flavour to destroy a party. See you guys shortly!

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Allie X - Girl With No Face

39. Armand Hammer - BLK LBL

Experimental Abstract East Coast Hip Hop
25 January 2024
Soundcloud


Never to pursue things in an ordinary fashion, Armand Hammer follow 2023's exceptional We Buy Diabetic Test Strips with an album which is not really an album, more a compilation of unreleased tracks, officially available exclusively on vinyl, purchasable from their shows. It's called BLK LBL, and while the elusiveness and b-side content may cause one to think of it as subpar, think again. The awkward beats suffocate the nighttime streets as Billy's fiercely original flows cut the entire game into the shape of his face, providing already unnecessary proof that he is the greatest rapper in the underground without argument. Simply, Armand Hammer's outtakes are better than any other hip hop team's a-sides. And it makes me nauseous.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Hannah Frances - Keeper of the Shepherd

38. Hannah Frances - Keeper of the Shepherd

Progressive Folk
1 March 2024
Spotify


Like a dance, Hannah's meandering vocal melodies sway one way while her odd time signatures step in another. Yet, they hang onto each other, implicitly in sync, swelling their souls upward as well as remaining deeply fixed into earthly sounds, just as the cover would suggest. Nevertheless, I do have a complaint. Vacant Intimacies would be the perfect closer to any album. And yet, it sits second-to-last. Sure, the final song is as brilliant as they come, but it'd be better suited in an earlier position in favour of my proposed reorder. Of course, I am sure she has her reasons, so I'll shut up and be appreciative of the near-immaculate collection she has offered us. Who do I think I am, anyway? Hannah Frances? I'm not.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Oranssi Pazuzu - Muuntautuja

37. Oranssi Pazuzu - Muuntautuja

Psychedelic Avant-Garde Metal
11 October 2024
Spotify


Gradually leaning into a more electronic design, Oranssi Pazuzu makes the case that hell might be a digital production after all. The ritualistic vocals conjure the necessary demonic energy, disturbing us with an experimental evil that is heavy yet also precise in its industrial procedures. Some of these sounds rival textures I haven’t heard in decades, layering the intensity until the atmosphere is unbreathable, building and building upwards as an authentic piece of art in the darkest sense.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Mk.gee - Two Star & the Dream Police

36. Mk.gee - Two Star & the Dream Police

Alternative R&B Neo-Psychedelia
9 February 2024
Spotify


My Mk.gee comparison points will almost seem like insults to certain music snobs. For example, his vocal style could be confused for Justin Bieber in a parallel (much better) universe. Some poppier songwriting choices may even be compared to Ed Sheeran, if Ed Sheeran was interesting. I’ve also read people label it the sequel to Frank Ocean’s Blonde, and I can hear that. But whatever you think about those names, don’t let them deter you from taking the plunge because Two Star & the Dream Police is a mood-fixer, healing the soul on an emotional day without asking for anything in return. Granted, it doesn’t stick in my memory as well as I’d hope, but when I put it on, I immediately greet it with a smile.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Foxing - Foxing

35. Foxing - Foxing

Art Indie Noise Rock
13 September 2024
Spotify


Foxing is such an eclectic album that it’s tricky to genre-define without resorting to convoluted strands of hybrid DNA. My initial temptation is to say, “For indie fans of Arcade Fire!” but it’s way louder than that, sometimes stepping so hard on the metal pedal that you’d consider them a metal band. Regardless, while it does a lot and does it well, the clutter is coordinated and weaponised, constantly setting you up to knock you down with an offence of guitar fury and a versatile vocalist who can sing just about anything.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. MJ Lenderman - Manning Fireworks

34. glass beach - Plastic Death

Progressive Indie Art Rock
19 January 2024
Spotify


Setting the stage for hope, Plastic Death holds the unique honour of being the year’s first really good record. And whether you agree or not, I feel it achieved such high marks by smooshing every Radiohead album together into one place, spreading itself across the full spectrum of mournful euphorics, artsy smarts, and chaotic mathematics to toss our emotions around like a ball in a psychedelic washing machine. Each song contains an exciting left hook out of nowhere, but for my money, Motions will be immortalised on the list of 2024’s greatest.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: Godspeed You! Black Emperor - No Title as of 13 February 2024 28,340 Dead

33. Godspeed You! Black Emperor - "No Title as of 13 February 2024 28,340 Dead"

Post-Rock
4 October 2024
Spotify


The curse of Godspeed is that their previous records redefined the possibilities of what instrumental post-rock could do. As a result, their modern albums only brush the impossibly high bar they once set, which is a layout for disappointment irrespective of valiant attempts. Furthermore, their world-building expertise forever falls one of two ways: either optimistically utopian or devastatingly apocalyptic. I, like most, prefer the latter, but this 2024 release is a picturesque scene of uplifting triumph, sacrificing its conceptual perfection for more jammy weavings, and I struggle to find moments to latch onto. Yet, despite my complaints, I had to be honest with myself. This album is still superior to almost anything else on offer. To not include it would be unfair. It’s not about me or even them. It’s about everyone. 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX.Knocked Loose - You Won't Go Before You're Supposed To

32. Knocked Loose - You Won't Go Before You're Supposed To

Metalcore
10 May 2024
Spotify


No group knocked the metal scene loose this year quite as hard as Knocked Loose. By attacking absolutely everyone with an armoury of sharp technical tricks hidden within a cyclonic flailing of disarray, it’s the unrelenting fury of the project that drives over the listener, then backs up over the listener, and drives over the listener again. Yet, perhaps the guest slots sustain the longest talking points. Poppy’s 2024 album did not land for me, but her delivery on Suffocate could be argued as the most passionate performance of her career. Meanwhile, Slaughterhouse 2, featuring Chris Motionless, shoves its hook into my cheek and face-kicks me into the river as perhaps the year’s catchiest heavy-heavy song. 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Cindy Lee - Diamond Jubilee

31. Cindy Lee - Diamond Jubilee

Psychedelic Hypnagogic Indie Pop
29 March 2024
YouTube


In our rapidly progressing world where every art form has to keep testing the limits, Diamond Jubilee rejiggles the script by taking the nostalgia of '60s sunshine pop and shoving an unreasonable amount of it into one place until two hours of music makes me feel sugar-sick. There's a reason why most records from that decade are so short! It is unnatural to be subjected to retro psychedelia for this length of time! It's daunting just to press play! However, as it goes on (and on and on), this sound becomes your life, mellowing you out like a slightly warped vinyl, sloppy and lofi just the way we dig it. That this album exists in our current age is weird enough but secondary to the head-spinning accolades, already dubbed the Album of the Year by Pitchfork, Crack Magazine, and Exclaim! Personally, I hear some filler material, which is to be expected across such an insane runtime, but there is an unquantifiable aura to the offering, partly due to its sheer size. It's almost impossible to properly comprehend.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Blood Incantation - Absolute Elsewhere

30. Blood Incantation - Absolute Elsewhere

Progressive Death Metal
October 4, 2024
Spotify


Take a survey around the metal scene, and you’ll hear this album frequently touted as 2024’s best. Me, I’m less convinced, but that does not detract from my joy, because, by any measurement, Absolute Elsewhere is unlike anything one would expect from a genre usually so strict on its VIP list. If there were one band I would (and many others have) compared it to, that would be Pink Floyd, with long stretches of psychedelic atmospherics that drift the listener far out, lost in space. This combination works surprisingly well, especially when the more traditional metal brings the heavy dynamic like gravity, and you crack your skull on re-entry. With so many distinct sounds found in one place, it’s never quite what I expect it to be, which in itself is to be expected from a group who has released three of the most lauded death metal records over eight years. Everyone is listening now, so what’s next? 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Geordie Greep - The New Sound

29. Geordie Greep - The New Sound

Progressive Art Jazz-Rock
October 4, 2024
Spotify


Panic stations, everyone! The New Sound, as it turns out, is the same as the old sound. Black Midi’s sound, that is. So now we know that Geordie Greep, the frontman and guitarist of Black Midi, was Black Midi all along, as this could be a Black Midi album. Of course, that is a compliment because Black Midi/Geordie Greep are the emperors of unsettlingly frantic energy, provoking a brand of discomfort to the likes no other musical output has achieved, ever. Moreover, on this record, said anxiety is dialled to the maximum, with complex jazzy compositions perverted by the overtly creepy lyrics, which are modern poetic masterpieces (read Holy, Holy, for example, and then take a shower). However, we are talking over an hour of this maniacal content, and Geordie’s songs are simply not diverse enough to warrant the time it demands. For this reason, I hope Greep’s success does not give his ego the idea that his band is redundant because, even if they exist on the same tall shelf, I still prefer every Black Midi album above this.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Thou - Umbilical

28. Thou - Umbilical

Sludge Metal
31 May 2024
Spotify


Sludge is having a year, but Thou sinks deep below the mud and conquers from that foundational space of impenetrable blackout. But while it’s all-the-way heavy, they’ve used actual hooks to paint their catchy hatred, to the point where one could reimagine tracks like The Promise as, dare I suggest it, a pop composition if you smudged the pallet to a different colour. Meanwhile, something like House of Ideas reaches levels of such dense onslaught that it is the first material to capture the essence of Jane Doe since Jane Doe. Why every metal record doesn’t sound this good is frustrating. 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Beyoncé - Cowboy Carter

27. Beyoncé - Cowboy Carter

Contemporary Country Pop
29 March 2024
Spotify


Like many, the announcement of a Beyoncé country album cringed me. But make no mistake, this piece transcends just some homage gimmick by expanding into an ALBUM album, something far more significant than the sum of its content, in the way that only the Queen knows how. Whether you appreciate Beyoncé for her ability to slide around genres without losing her signature stamp, or you oppose her for "NOT BEING AN AUTHENTIC COUNTRY ARTIST," there is one word that applies across the Cowboy Carter board, and that is "unignorable". The debate it sparked lit fires deep within the country field, celebrated by black artists, exposing racists, and making award ceremonies uncomfortable with their options. And that's why Carter is perhaps the most essential album of the year, even if... it's not perfect. For example, its incorporation of a Beatles and Parton cover was too obvious, suspiciously appearing like White People Pandering, ensuring she flaunted the approval of the biggest names in the game (Willie Nelson included). Furthermore, the spoken interludes ruin the tightness of the project, a flaw that is not something I've ever accused Beyoncé of before. Simply put, her albums since 2013 have been artistic masterpieces, and this one isn't quite there. Still, it's a grower, an experience, and proof that B tirelessly tests boundaries and explores genrescapes while taking her critics head-on.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Trhä - ∫um'ad∂ejja cavvaj

26. Trhä - ∫um'ad∂ejja cavvaj

Atmospheric Black Metal
1 August 2024
Spotify


On a list of things that don't make sense, Trhä has released 32 albums in four years. If this is a case of "throwing everything at the wall to see what sticks," then ∫um'ad∂ejja cavvaj is one of the bits that stuck hard. Don't get too comfortable, though, as it is a fully black metal project, pure for the elitists and lo-fi as it should be, yet it eclipses the blueprint to create something far superior. The blackprint, if you will. If this record is eventually touted as a genre classic, I would not be in the least surprised.

Janthopoyism: Your New Religion


The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Trhä - ∫um'ad∂ejja cavvaj

25. Deathbrain - A Slice of Life

Atmospheric Drum and Bass
6 May 2024
Spotify


Almost an hour and a half of melodic drum and bass is far too much to ask of anyone, but just take my hand, and we’ll get through it. The key is to allow it to do its thing over there while you do your thing over here, and every now and then, take a moment of mindfulness to appreciate the audio enhancement to your reality. The gorgeous production is like drizzle in spring, pitter-pattering serotonin into your brain until your lungs inflate, breathing in the euphoria, finding peace in the long journey where every step deserves the space. Actually, perhaps 84 minutes of endorphins is precisely what the world needs right now.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Trhä - ∫um'ad∂ejja cavvaj

24. samlrc - A Lonely Sinner

Post-Rock
8 March 2024
Spotify


I want you to teach me how to be a scary wolf! What’s fascinating about A Lonely Sinner is that it takes an eternity to warm up. Song after song (including a 12-minute piece) of well-produced soft atmospheres are lovely to listen to but pack zero punches. But then... BUT THEN... Storge ushers in the second half, the album shifts, and I tumble down into the dense abstractions of what makes this release so orgasmically unforgettable. Post-rock forever, man. When it’s done right, it hits the spot no other genre knows how to reach, and samlrc has nurtured a corner of that sound which is wholly their own. Furthermore, when the Hyperballad strings smooth over the ending of For M., you realise everyone has been paying attention.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. ShrapKnel & Controller 7 - Nobody Planning to Leave

23. ShrapKnel & Controller 7 - Nobody Planning to Leave

Abstract East Coast Hip Hop
7 June 2024
Spotify


Hip-hop outfits tend to spiral into the commercial R&B world to assemble their hooks or, conversely, protest by digging their heels into the old school. But then there are albums like Nobody Planning to Leave, which show everyone that you can be fresh without following either trend. With an aggressively biting energy, this collaborative project builds an army from its guest slots, offering the same excitement that Odd Future once gave me for five seconds, except these horroresque beats tower much higher than anything you could compare them to (Uru Metal, anyone?). Every song is so good that you can’t imagine it’ll get any better, but track after track surprises me, and listen after listen, new details come to the forefront. It’s pretty untouchable in the genre for 2024. 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Kim Gordon - The Collective

22. Kim Gordon - The Collective

Experimental Industrial Noise Rock Hip Hop
8 March 2024
Spotify


If there ever was a study on how to get older yet remain cooler than anyone else in the industry, Kim Gordon is the entire textbook. After the long-gone (but still heartbreaking) split of Sonic Youth, it's easy to see who contributed what to that band. Thurston keeps churning out decent noise rock records, but they're hardly groundbreaking. Meanwhile, it's Gordon who has spun way out on a cutting-edge industrial trip, indicating that she was the brain behind her previous band's celebrated innovation. Her last record knocked me to the floor in slow motion, but The Collective may even be the superior effort. I'm interested in how much of this sound we can owe to her or her producers, but the deadpan freeform lyrical character of Kim's records is all hers. It's so Kim Gordon. Laziness as an art form. That was always her thing. She does not give any fucks. Never has.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Porter Robinson - SMILE! :D

21. Porter Robinson - SMILE! :D

Indietronica Electropop Rock
26 July 2024
Spotify


What Porter Robinson does better than anyone is make music that will slot into your current mental mood and gradually improve your situation. The analytical, self-deprecating themes engage with those low moments, gifting a sense of solidarity, while the bitpoppy electronics lift the room sky-high, having you joy-dancing at your desk within minutes. As the title SMILE! :D would suggest, it's a webpage straight from our contemporary internet world, in touch with the existential weight of being human yet breaking through with a cartoony aesthetic in the exact right places. Such a mix is best illustrated in the song Cheerleader, which may very well be my favourite track of the year. And for a more in-depth glimpse into Porter Robinson's life, read the lyrics of the equally satisfying Russain Roulette:

"Pitchfork reports, they're calling me, their words: 'The big new thing,' oh,
YouTube review: Funny monkey takes a piss into his own mouth, crazy."


The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Jessica Pratt - Here in the Pitch

20. Jessica Pratt - Here in the Pitch

Contemporary Folk
3 May 2024
Spotify


It's such a statement of confidence when an artist presents an album under 30 minutes, needing no more time to state their case. I guess that's how you know you've nailed it, and on Here in the Pitch, Jessica does just that by doing what she does best but better than she's ever done it. By maturing her subtle weirdo vibes, she has conspired her distant witchiness into an album that comes pre-grainy as if it is a long-lost classic of yesteryears. Be honest, if I played you Better Hate but told you it was a genre-defining song from the 70s folk scene, would you not believe me?  

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Mount Eerie - Night Palace

19. Mount Eerie - Night Palace

Post-Avant-Slacker Folk Rock
1 November 2024
Spotify


One hour and 20 minutes?!? C’mon, Mount Eerie! Especially when considering the lethargy that comes with expanded slacker drone soundscapes additionally weighted by the lonely philosophies that Phil Elverum feels deeper than anyone else. I’m tired before I even begin! Yet one thing Night Palace can boast higher than Mount Eerie’s standard woe-is-me poetics is a series of manic ideas, whereby the excessive melancholic beauty is regularly offset by some screamy explosions or experimental noise that, somehow, holds my attention. For this reason, I can appreciate how pretty much every Album of the Year list is glorifying this as an essential 2024 experience, but to slam into a 12-minute track right at the end is a total insult, and I am always relieved when this listen is over.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Still House Plants - If I Don't Make It, I Love U

18. Mabe Fratti - Sentir que no sabes

Avant-Art Folk Pop
28 June 2024
Spotify


Mabe Fratti possesses the vocal prowess and cello proficiency to effortlessly front a commercially viable folk-jazz outfit, but she has chosen the stranger life. The electroacoustics push the world aside to create ample space down the middle, allowing her serene melodies to flutter through the sparseness without snagging their wings on the surrounding terrain that ranges from soft paddings to jagged turbulence. Don’t be one of those people who sleep on Sentir que no sabes as one of 2024’s best. It’s pretty much the audio equivalent of what I’m seeking in a girlfriend. If you get what I mean, hit me up!

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Porter Robinson - SMILE! :D

17. Nilüfer Yanya - My Method Actor

Indie Art Rock
13 September 2024
Spotify


My Method Actor is a wow album that’s oh-so-easy to fall in love with immediately, almost accidentally, thanks to the gentle indie that rocks with comfortable familiarity. But even within that place, something more obscure exists which feels wholly original, where a lo-fi psychedelia fuzziness sinks per every listen and becomes easier to fall deeper and deeper in love with still. We could list an unfair number of these songs as 2024’s best, but the title track, in particular, makes my whole world disappear. 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Porter Robinson - SMILE! :D

16. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Wild God

Gospel Art Rock
30 August 2024
Spotify


When you’ve been churning out classics for as many decades as Cave, the perfection from practice means it’s unlikely the Bad Seeds will ever release a bad album. Taken as its own project, Wild God holds tremendous merit, illustrating the next natural evolutionary step on Cave’s mourning, reaching heights of absolute hope within abundant spirituality, articulating his thoughts using poetics with which nobody can compete. Conversely, however, when compared with his entire catalogue, this albeit worthy addition perhaps doesn’t quite reach the peaks of some works due to a slight lack of energy that has no interest in packing the POWs we may have selfishly come to expect. No matter! His reputation remains as sturdy as ever by providing us with yet another new sound which unfurls with such an unforced joy that you get the sense he did not write these songs; they wrote themselves, and he was merely the prophetic vessel. I say this with every album, but Nick Cave is the best musical artist we have, and the history books shall remember him for centuries to come as a legend of the tallest order. There is no one alive today who even challenges this notion. I touched his hand once.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Vampire Weekend - Only God Was Above Us

15. Vampire Weekend - Only God Was Above Us

Indie Chamber Pop Rock
April 5 2024
Spotify


Every band lucky enough to have a long career will eventually come to the album that knocks them off course, never to recover, forever trying to regain what they once were. For my money, 2019's Father of the Bride was Vampire Weekend's beginning of the end as it displayed all the hallmarks of a perfect catalogue interrupted as something losing grip of itself up its own ass. However, I was wrong. With Only God Was Above Us, we can now view their previous wanky record as a blip and, to be fair, a glorious blip at that. And now here we are, back on track with one of the most consistently brilliant bands on the planet, still unmistakable Vampire Weekend, but even more than that. They've pushed themselves to play to their strengths, and I do mean playing. Playfulness is what they do. And it's resulted in an album that sounds like a best-of compilation, but not of songs. Of styles.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Melt-Banana - 3+5

14. Melt-Banana - 3+5

Experimental Noise Rock
23 August 2024
Spotify


For over three decades, Melt-Banana have audio-molested audiences, growing and then conquering as one of the most revered noise rock champions from Japan and even the world. So many of their records could be considered genre classics, but with 3+5, they’ve exceeded their maximum and outdone their only competition, which is themselves. The key to such prolonged success is that they do not let their delirious energy and explosive chaos lose the necessity of sprightly catchiness, where every song is armed with a dangerous amount of hooks and tricks, encouraging even the most hardcore of fans to punch through their computer and then dive headfirst into a wall. 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Still House Plants - If I Don't Make It, I Love U

13. SUMAC - The Healer

Atmospheric Avant-Garde Post-Sludge Metal
21 June 2024
Spotify


Should I write an essay about the craftsmanship behind The Healer? Or a tragic love poem? The first thing to note is the 25-minute opener, which is demanding business, at times one chord lasting for minutes. But what you need to understand is that this is a test. They're weeding out certain listeners before getting to the prize, because after they've stretched you out for such an extended period... they rapidly start to pile the riffs upon you, getting heavier and heavier until you are borderline drowning beneath the all-consuming sludge. Oh, Jeez fucking Louise, I remember everything now. Nothing in musical history has ever sunk to this level! How is this not the most worshipped metal album in the world? I don't even like sludge, man! 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Mustafa the Poet - Dunya

12. Mustafa the Poet - Dunya

Contemporary Folk
27 September 2024
Spotify


Only when you hear the love for Allah in music do you realise how underrepresented that influence is from the contemporary landscape. Mustafa the Poet musters a heartfelt spiritual potency within his philosophical reflections, which are produced to melancholic perfection, something so gorgeously intangible that you don’t know what it is, just that it’s here and it usually isn’t anywhere. Perhaps this isn’t the platform to say this, but I prefer artists who believe in God. Only they can access these metaphysical planes driven by an emotional faith that overrides the mental blustering with which we are so frequently bombarded. شكرًا لك

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Still House Plants - If I Don't Make It, I Love U

11. Xiu Xiu - 13" Frank Beltrame Italian Stiletto With Bison Horn Grips

Experimental Neo-Psychedelia Rock
27 September 2024
Spotify


I have a theory about Xiu Xiu that goes like this: they are perfectly capable of constructing accessible music that will floor their critics and rise to the top of their discography whenever they like. But that's not what they like. Instead, they regularly and intentionally throw their artwork off the rails to ensure their experimental chops are fed. It's for this reason that their uncomfortable career is so lauded. Everyone can find joy somewhere, but the hardcore fans can sleep easy that their favourite band is largely safe, protected by a field of impenetrable records that will scare almost everyone away. Regardless, with 13" Frank Beltrame Italian Stiletto With Bison Horn Grips, it was time to do the realignment thing again, and they've produced another masterstroke of pop weirdo sadcore that underlines Jamie Stewart's sombre vocals with highly energised neo-psychedelia, already being hailed as one of their greatest albums. Actually, when I listen to it, it kinda sounds like their greatest. 


The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Beth Gibbons - Lives Outgrown

10. Beth Gibbons - Lives Outgrown

Chamber Folk
17 May 2024
Spotify


The last Portishead release, Third, came out 16 years ago (and the one before that 11 years further back). Hence, fans cannot hold their breath for new material, or they certainly will die. However, by some miracle, 2024 was almost our year, with singer Beth Gibbons offering us her first proper solo album, and I, like everyone, only had one fearful question: what if it sucks? Of course, that has never happened, and despite the ache of such a long wait, it was completely worth it. Her voice is as gorgeous as ever. Her creative perspective is as exciting as ever. And she achieves so much by doing so little, a hypnotically mellow project that nearly sounds like a Portishead record, except grown from soil rather than machines. Sooo, basically, what we’re saying is that Beth has only ever made songs on par with God? Cool cool. It checks out.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Still House Plants - If I Don't Make It, I Love U

09. Still House Plants - If I Don't Make It, I Love U

Experimental Post-Math Rock
12 April 2024
Spotify


You know what shouldn't work? Three band members playing independently, each going on their own tangents, jamming to a different tune with complete freedom, almost ignoring one another. And yet, what Still House Plants do... totally works! My hunch is they primarily owe their listenability to frontwoman Jess Hickie-Kallenbach, whose unabrasive vocal cords stir beauty into the chaos with such relief that she could easily fit in an R&B outfit if she so chose. Nonetheless, If I Don't Make It, I Love U is not easy listening and not everyone is going to get it. But for me, it's been a long while since an album has inspired me to want to start a band. Just. Like. This. 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Ka - The Thief Next to Jesus

08. Ka - The Thief Next to Jesus

Drumless Abstract East Coast Hip Hop
19 August 2024
Spotify


Isn’t it always the way? Death forcing you to face the emptiness in what you once had, only aware of its presence once it is gone. Two months after the release of this album, Ka passed away at age 52 for causes unknown, and the underground cried in a unified wail. As a long-time fan, I mourned right there next to them, but I find solace in that Ka had some short time to enjoy the response to The Thief Next to Jesus, which many were praising as his greatest work, and, in hindsight, perhaps the perfect send-off after all. His signature sedated deliveries smear darkness over dusty gospelesque beats. His compact lyrics quietly dismantle Christianity from the perspective of African Americans. And he keeps it old school with a fuck-the-frills approach, holding more integrity than anyone else in the game. Just listen to the closing song, True Holy Water, which is a tough piece to get through but functions as a potent full-stop to Ka’s career before he checked out forever. There's no denying such a considerable loss to the hip-hop world. But at least we have this.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. The Cure - Songs of a Lost World

07. The Cure - Songs of a Lost World

Alternative Gothic Rock
1 November 2024
Spotify


Not that long ago, I listened to every Cure album in chronological order. After that, I concluded that it was the most perfect discography in existence, whereby any dips were few and far between, and the lesser albums still held their own. Part of its flawlessness could partly be owed to the fact that The Cure appeared to be a shut book without new material for 16 years, allowing us to evaluate the timeline as a complete unit. But just because we couldn’t see behind the black fog did not mean that the band hadn’t been busy, and somehow, in 2024, we found ourselves within Songs of a Lost World. Now, considering such a mammoth legacy at stake, some nerves were understandable, but these were quickly squashed the second Robert Smith started singing, his vocals somehow sounding identical to how they were decades earlier. Furthermore, the music remains pure Cure, except more so with instrumental pieces dragged out, slowed down, beautified with strings yet desaturated, isolated, bleak, and epic. So epic. Their most epic album to date. Even further exciting is that they reportedly have another one coming next year, too. I’ll get that list ready for you, then. 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Ka - The Thief Next to Jesus

06. Jamie xx - In Waves

Future Garage House
20 September 2024
Spotify


All hail the UK king of garage house! Nine years have passed since the modern electronic masterpiece In Colour blessed our stereos, which is why it’s such a relief that Jamie has done it again without doing the same thing whatsoever. Where the previous was a nostalgic euphoria piece, In Waves lessens the ethereal naivety in favour of playing with funk grooves, Latino progressions, and vocal samples to boost us with a healing version of his signature melodies. Irrespective of your opinion, Jamie xx rewards attention, thriving in the tiny details that carefully curate a vibe he has explicitly selected for us, yanking on our surrendered strings with a knowing smirk, bodies bouncing at his command, never letting go, only dropping us when the album is over, ready to spin again.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Charli XCX - BRAT

05. Charli XCX - BRAT

Electropop Dance Music
7 June 2024
Spotify


Whenever I chat about Charli XCX, I repeat the same stupid hipster thing: I knew her before you! I shout about it because I recall playing True Romance to my friends in 2013, and they laughed at who I had become. Fast forward, and now everyone is bumping her shit, and I feel compelled to remind them that I already pointed the way a decade ago. Nevertheless, I am not bitter. Quite the opposite. I have seen her live more times than any other artist, and I've loved to watch her sound grow, her audience size grow, and her unceasing streak of wins, album after album, now standing tall upon a discography of surprisingly solid pop records featuring hooks more delicious than you'll find anywhere else in the scene. And then there is BRAT, without a doubt her greatest success to date, and 2024's most popular album from the radio to the critics to the Collins Dictionary. People will argue it's her best work, I'll argue it's not (How I'm Feeling Now, cough), but I get it. It's all about those bangerz. Those bangerz are so banging. Charli XCX knows how to bang.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Laurie Anderson - Amelia

04. Laurie Anderson - Amelia

Modern Classical Spoken Word Chamber Music
30 August 2024
Spotify


Only Laurie Anderson would (and could) produce a spoken word concept album about Amelia Earhart and, in doing so, paint such a vividly moving soundscape that you watch it in your mind like a film, soaring through the sky and then crashing down down down. It’s a unified exhibition of unparalleled artistic talent that Laurie has refined over her 77 years on earth, epitomising those Never Too Late motivational memes. Above this, it’s a demonstrable advantage of a long career that refused to sell out; Anderson unconcerned with making a comeback or appealing to the commercial masses because she never has. There’s a lesson in here, if you can find it beneath the historical education and in-depth introspection ruminating on the triumphs and failures of unflappable ambition. Yes, I’m talking about Amelia Earhart. Yes, I’m talking about Laurie Anderson.

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Chat Pile - Cool World

03. Chat Pile - Cool World

Sludge Metal Noise Rock
11 October 2024
Spotify


Woah woah woah, oh all my fucking gods, what have you done, Chat Pile? WHAT HAVE YOU DONE??? I know people get upset when we make this tired comparison, but after mapping out the nihilistic industrial noise rock of the last six-odd years, no one can deny that Daughters' You Won't Get What You Want made a brand new hole, and everyone rushed through. But Chat Pile have sharpened their weapons into something fucking terrifying and, with this album, have officially conquered the genre. In another more abstract connection, it's what Korn should've become if they'd stuck to their original guns because those densely dissonant riffs and that overbearing vocal anguish are legitimately concerning. 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Father John Misty - Mahashmashana

02. Father John Misty - Mahashmashana

Baroque Chamber Pop
22 November 2024
Spotify


What's so enjoyable about writing this entry is that I get to kill two birds with one review. Kendrick Lamar surprise dropped GNX on the same day as Mahashmashana, and I must point out many things. For starters, GNX is notably absent from my list as a subpar record from the greatest rapper alive. Secondly, Father John Misty seemingly responded to Kendrick with a diss track, God's Trash, which is just hilarious. But most importantly, publications noted that the two have released new albums in the same year for over a decade (2012, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2022, and 2024). Any type of presumed competition is laughable due to the crater-sized gap between genres, but it is worth stating that some of those Kendrick releases turned the history of hip hop upside down forever, while Misty simply created sweet chamber folk poetics for us to smile to. However, for the first time, Father John Misty has obliterated Kendrick's offering with the absolute best record from his two-plus-decade career. It appears that, after so many years of toying with the line between narcissistic introspection and overly-epic orchestral productions, Father John Misty has finally fingered the orgasm spot, which has spurted gold across this entire record, song after song, goosebump after goosebump. Sorry, Kendrick. Better luck next round. 

The Top 50 Albums of 2022: XX. Magdalena Bay - Imaginal Disk

01. Magdalena Bay - Imaginal Disk

Neo-Psychedelia Synthpop
23 August 2024
Spotify


Magdalena Bay’s 2021 album Mercurial World was already in hot conversation as one of the essentially essential records of the PAST decade, but when a sophomore is better, then what? Is this pop history in the making? What FUTURE are we looking at here? Even the PRESENT is difficult to comprehend. How does one create an album so magical that it shimmers? And, perhaps the most crucial question: what reality do you have to exist in to produce such confidently cheerful art despite the weight of our daily news headlines? It is not of this planet. It caresses the rarest calibre of musical output achievable. The one absolute perfection. And I want in.

That Lamb Prophecy

Big Time Honourable Mentions

천사 인터뷰 (Angel Interview) - 김뜻돌 [Meaningful Stone]
WILLOW - Empathogen
Kacey Musgraves - Deeper Well
The Body - The Crying Out of Things
Fontaines D.C. - Romance
Vylet Pony - Monarch of Monsters

Smaller Time Honourable Mentions

Glassing - From the Other Side of the Mirror
Syzy - The weight of the world
Uboa - Impossible Light
1010benja - Ten Total
Fire-Toolz - Breeze
Lava La Rue - Starface
Roxy Radclyffe - The Median's Ark
Liana Flores - Flower of the Soul
Juliana Gattas - Maquillada en la cama
St. Vincent - All Born Screaming
Martha Skye Murphy - Um
Ulcerate - Cutting the Throat of God
Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead - Tragedy As Catharsis
Cameron Winter - Heavy Metal
The Last Dinner Party - Prelude to Ecstasy
Taylor Swift - The Tortured Poets Department