J Balvin

July 2025 Recap: A Monthly Exercise in Critical Transparency

Screenshot of the trailer for Glyndebourne’s production of Giuseppe Verdi’s Falstaff by There Stands the Glass.

The Top Ten Albums of July 2025
1. Clipse- Let God Sort Em Out
Culturally inappropriate.

2. Tyler, The Creator- Don’t Tap the Glass
Provocative.

3. Dom Salvador, Adrian Younge and Ali Shaheed Muhammad- JID024
Miraculous samba.

4. Charlie Hunter and Ella Feingold- Different Strokes for Different Folks
My kind of party.

5. Dino Saluzzi- El Viejo Caminante
Heartbreaking bandoneon.

6. Teddy Abrams- Preludes
A new form of pianism.

7. Myke Towers- Island Boyz
Endless summer.

8. Burna Boy- No Sign of Weakness
Muscular pop.

9. Theon Cross- Affirmations (Live at Blue Note New York)
Hilariously loud.

10. Freddie Gibbs and the Alchemist- Alfredo 2
Old school.


The Top Three Reissues and Reimaginings of July 2025
1. Nick Drake- The Making of Five Leaves Left
Deep in the weeds.

2. Cecil Taylor and Tony Oxley- Flashing Spirits
Live in 1988.

3. Paul Weller- Find El Dorado
Covers of premium obscurities.


The Top Ten Songs of July 2025
1. MC Yallah- “Tunyedde”
Straight outta Kampala.

2. John Glacier- “Fly With Me”
Moonshot.

3. Cécile McLorin Salvant- "Oh Snap"
Kitchen sink.

4. Syd- “Die for This”
Alive.

5. Olivia Dean- “Lady Lady”
Groovy groovy.

6. Jorja Smith- "With You"
Bliss.

7. Che- “Ba$$”
Molly anthem.

8. DJ Snake featuring J Balvin- “Noventa”
Siren song.

9. Pino Palladino and Blake Mills featuring Chris Dave- "Taka"
A-team.

10. Trio of Bloom- "Queen King"
Nels Cline, Craig Taborn and Marcus Gilmore.


The Top Ten Performances of July 2025
1. Woody Guthrie Folk Festival (Okemah)
My notes.

2. Steve Cardenas, Forest Stewart and Brian Steever at Westport Coffee House
My Instagram clip.

3. Elvis Costello & The Imposters at the Uptown Theater
My Instagram clip.

4. Crystal Gayle at Ameristar Casino
My review.

5. Nick Hmeljak, Henry Scamurra, Isaiah Petrie, Jordan Faught and Jaylen Ward at Westport Coffee House
My review.

6. Made in France at the Market at Meadowbrook
My Instagram snapshot.

7. Summerfest at St. Mary’s Episcopal Church
My notes.

8. Stan Kessler, Aaron Sizemore, Craig Akin and Taylor Babb at the Music House
My Instagram snapshot.

9. Michael August and Nell Levin at the Woody Guthrie Center (Tulsa)
Instagram snapshot.

10. Matt Hopper, Gerald Spaits and Todd Strait at Green Lady Lounge
My Instagram snapshot.


The previous monthly recap is here.

A Tough Pill to Swallow: The Top 50 Songs of 2021

Screenshot of Injury Reserve’s “Knees” video by There Stands the Glass.

My ranking of the fifty new songs I loved most in 2021 bears little resemblance to There Stands the Glass’ Top Albums of 2021 list.  The disparity is intentional.  A forthcoming accounting of the 50 best live performances I caught in 2021 will contain further deviations.  Injury Reserve’s disquieting “Knees” meant the most to me in recent months.  The rest of the songs are sequenced by personal preference with a bit of flexibility for optimal playlist appeal.  Here’s the Spotify playlist.


1. Injury Reserve- "Knees"

2. Coi Leray- "No More Parties"

3. J Balvin and Skrillex- “"In Da Ghetto"

4. Tokischa and Rosalía- "Linda"

5. Priya Ragu- "Lockdown"

6. Little Simz- "Rollin' Stone"

7. Cake Pop, Pritty, Aaron Carter and Ravenna Golden- "Satin Bedsheets"

8. The Streets- "Who's Got the Bag"

9. Celeste- "Tonight Tonight"

10. Billie Eilish- "Lost Cause"

11. Badbadnotgood- "City of Mirrors"

12. Chlöe- "Have Mercy"

13. Sir the Baptist featuring Anthony Hamilton- "Jesus in the Ghetto"

14. Rod Wave- "Tombstone"

15. Remi Wolf- “Anthony Kiedis”

16. Blackstarkids- "Juno"

17. Shannon & The Clams- "Year of the Spider"

18. Olivia Rodrigo- "Brutal"

19. Amyl and the Sniffers- "Freaks to the Front"

20. Willow featuring Cherry Glazerr- “¡Breakout!”

21. Elle King and Miranda Lambert- “Drunk (And I Don’t Wanna Go Home)”

22. Roman Alexander featuring Ashley Cooke- "Between You & Me"

23. Tinashe- "Bouncin'"

24. Megan Thee Stallion- "Thot Sh*t"

25. IDK with Swae Lee and Rico Nasty- "Keto"

26. Jungle- "No Rules"

27. Jana Rush- "Disturbed"

28. Nightmares on Wax- "Miami 80"

29. Earl Sweatshirt- "2010"

30. Slowthai featuring James Blake and Mount Kimbie- "Feel Away"

31. Pooh Shiesty featuring Gucci Mane- "Ugly"

32. Baby Keem and Kendrick Lamar- "Family Ties"

33. Saweetie featuring Doja Cat- "Best Friend"

34. City Girls- "Scared"

35. Kevin Gates- "Plug Daughter 2"

36. Maxo Kream- “Cripstian”

37. Tony Allen and Danny Brown- "Deer in Headlights"

38. Robert Plant and Alison Krauss- "High and Lonesome"

39. Samantha Fish featuring Tech N9ne- "Loud"

40. Rauw Alejandro and Anitta- “Brazilera”

41. Céu - “Chega Mais”

42. Adele- "All Night Parking"

43. Cécile McLorin Salvant - "Ghost Song"

44. Nick Cave and Warren Ellis- “Albuquerque”

45. Willie Nelson- "Too Sick to Pray"

46. Brittney Spencer- "Sober & Skinny"

47. Lauren Alaina- "It Was Me"

48. Moby, Mark Lanegan and Kris Kristofferson- "The Lonely Night"

49. Loretta Lynn- “I Don’t Feel at Home Anymore”

50. Sarah Brand- "Red Dress"


Links to 16 previous year-end There Stands the Glass surveys begin here.

The Saddest Air Horn

Original image by There Stands the Glass.

Original image by There Stands the Glass.

Concierto Virtual en Tiempos de COVID-19 Desde el Coliseo de Puerto Rico, a jarringly depressing album released by Rauw Alejandro in May, may be the definitive release of the Coronavirus era.  The audio companion of a free virtual performance is a permanent record of the international trauma.

While there’s nothing inherently wrong with the energetic effort of the Puerto Rican pop artist, the decision to issue the show as an official live album is bizarre.  Alejandro’s exhortations and a steady stream of air horn blasts are greeted with eerie silence.  The necessary absence of an audience is an unintentional repudiation of the sterility marring almost every responsible livestream performance.

Released last week, Alejandro’s debut studio album Afrodisíaco exudes the warmth lacking in Concierto Virtual. His lively interplay with stars including Anuel AA and J Balvin are hopeful affirmations. Even so, Alejandro’s extremely awkward live album stands out as an emblematic document of this difficult moment.