Ticket Awards 2017: The best music of the year

Kendrick Lamar, St Vincent, Lorde, and SZA reigned supreme this year, while the Irish music scene has never been so vibrant


If the nominations for the Ticket Awards are anything to go by, the music landscape of 2017 belongs to Kendrick Lamar, St Vincent, Lorde and SZA. The solo act reigns supreme over rock bands, DJs, men in chequered shirts with acoustic guitars (mostly) and big pop overlords.

Alternative pop, hip-hop and R&B are the genres of the moment, with acts such as these four going for the jugular as they dissect and discard social norms, be they political, social or even romantic.

When it comes to the albums, Lamar's Damn is ferocious. Lorde's Melodrama is dark, SZA's Ctrl is confident, St Vincent's Masseduction is raw and Lana Del Rey's Lust for Life is tough. Even though Ctrl is SZA's debut record, we can easily look back on these five solo acts, who delivered five of 2017's best albums, as a cultural stamp of our times. Ariana Grande didn't release an album this year but she was nominated as one of our top solo acts. She showed phenomenal courage when she organised the Manchester One Love benefit concert, 13 days after the bombing at her Manchester Arena concert on May 22nd. Music in 2017 needed to be strong, and that's what we got from these acts.

Annie Clark, the blessed St Vincent incarnate, has Best Album, Best Video, Best Gig and not one but two Best Track nominations. Her work is among a wonderful mixed bag of tracks. Both Drake's Passionfruit and Calvin Harris's Slide (featuring Frank Ocean and Migos) catch the fever of the throwback, hip-hop sound, creating understated and chilled-out tunes designed for a poolside party.

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Moody pop queen

Producer Jack Antonoff is notable by his presence on Lorde's Green Light and St Vincent's New York and Los Ageless. Lorde, our moody pop queen, skipped the awkward coming-of-age stage in her career and on Green Light and her album Melodrama she instead creates jilting, obscure and dagger-sharp pop songs.

When it came to bands, LCD Soundsystem have had a mixed year. Their Olympia gig in September blew everyone's minds (there was one bit during Tonite when the reverb was so loud that anyone standing near the speakers got a free blow dry), but their new album American Dream failed to make our critical top 10. It shows the power that a live show, nostalgia and a hearty back catalogue can sometimes hold over a new album. The same goes for The National: it doesn't really matter what they release, all that matters is that they're still around.

In the more niche categories, Irish acts struggled to make it in ahead of their international contemporaries, with Peter Whelan a notable exception. But the nominations for Best Irish Act are a full and vibrant spread. Pop, hip-hop, punk-pop, electronic, neo-soul, atmosfolk: we got it all. Newcomers Soulé, Le Boom, Shookrah, Mango, Pillow Queens and Dermot Kennedy made a huge impression on us, sneaking in beside our beloved Ships, Saint Sister and Rusangano Family. This list is a true reflection of how amazing the Irish music scene is right now. We've never had it better.

Best Album

  • Damn, Kendrick Lamar
  • Melodramam, Lorde
  • Ctrl , SZA
  • Masseduction, St Vincent
  • Lust for Life, Lana Del Rey
  • Procession, Ships
  • Big Fish Theory, Vince Staples
  • Drunk, Thundercat
  • The Ooz, King Krule
  • Pure Comedy, Father John Misty

Best Irish Act

  • Soulé
  • Rusangano Family
  • Ships
  • Pillow Queens
  • Le Boom
  • Mango
  • Saint Sister
  • Shookrah
  • Bad Bones
  • Dermot Kennedy

Best Band

  • LCD Soundsystem
  • The National
  • A Tribe Called Quest
  • Ships
  • Little Dragon
  • Griselda Gang

Best Solo Act

  • Kendrick Lamar
  • St Vincent
  • SZA
  • Lorde
  • Lana Del Rey
  • Ariana Grande
  • Perfume Genius
  • Kelela
  • Tove Lo
  • Drake

Best Track

  • Green Light, Lorde
  • Slide, Calvin Harris feat Frank Ocean & Migos
  • New York, St Vincent
  • Los Ageless, St Vincent
  • Love Galore, SZA
  • Passionfruit, Drake
  • Anymore, Goldfrapp
  • Humble, Kendrick Lamar
  • Want You Back, Haim

Best Video

  • Humble, Kendrick Lamar
  • Boys, Charli XCX
  • Los Ageless, St Vincent
  • Bodak Yellow, Cardi B
  • Bear Claws (Live Looper Version), The Academic

Best Gig

Best Festival

  • Electric Picnic
  • Another Love Story
  • Body & Soul
  • Sounds from a Safe Harbour
  • Castlepalooza

Best Traditional Album

  • The Blue Room, Martin Hayes Quartet
  • The Loom, Liam O'Connor
  • Cormac Begley, Cormac Begley
  • Roithleán, Saileog Ní Cheannabháin
  • Between the Earth and Sky, Lankum

Best Jazz Album

  • As the Wind, Evan Parker
  • Nightfall, Quercus
  • Find the Way, Aaron Parks
  • Honey and Salt, Matt Wilson
  • Open Book, Fred Hersch

Best Classical Album

  • György Kurtág: Complete Works for Ensemble and Choir – Netherlands Radio Choir, Asko|Schönberg/Reinbert de Leeuw
  • Edinburgh 1742 – Ensemble Marsyas/Peter Whelan
  • Mendelssohn: Violin Concerto; Hebrides Overture; Symphony No 5 – Isabelle Faust (violin), Freiburger Barockorchester/Pablo Heras-Casado
  • Rameau: Pygmalion; Fêtes de Polymnie Suite – Les Talens Lyriques/Christophe Rousset
  • Thomas Adès: Asyla; Tevot; Polaris; Brahms – LSO/Thomas Adès

Best Roots Album

Music critics: Louise Bruton, Jennifer Gannon, Niall Byrne, Una Mullally, Tony Clayton-Lea, Dean Van Nguyen, Siobhán Long, Michael Dervan, Joe Breen, Cormac Larkin