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Year In ReView: Vanyaland’s Top 25 songs of 2016

This was an odd year for music. As Vanyaland senior writer Daniel Brockman details in his annual Year In Pop roundup, the two-way highway of comings and goings produced a wealth of in-crisis pop, solemn rock, and schizophrenic hip-hop alongside a cruel abundance of iconic deaths and life-lessons from rock's dinosaur guard. And as this Vanyaland contributor list proves, it was another wildly eclectic and eccentric year of sound, proving that genre restriction is truly dead for those who still actually care. For our Top 25 Songs of 2016, we pitched and polled our writing staff about their favorite tracks of the year, then condensed each list for a composite ranking. Below are the results, with the song's nominator doing the honors of telling us why the song cracked the list in the first place. It may not be perfect, but it's ours, and it's worth more than just taking a Chance on.

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8. Kanye West, “Ultralight Beam”

The ambitions and emotional heft of “Ultralight Beam” makes for Kanye West’s most poignant and heart-wrenching cathartic anthem to date. West, the indelible gatekeeper of hip hop’s avant-grade maturation, let seventh studio album The Life of Pablo signify his audible undoing. Despite the frenetic and uncomfortably cerebral nature of Pablo, “Ultralight Beam” serves as its cinematic anchor. From the wide-eyed musings of the Dream to the dramatic articulations of Kelly Price (both backed by a choir), “Ultralight Beam” calls to transcendence, rhapsodizes about salvation, and juxtaposes strength with vulnerability. Chance The Rapper’s verse, ripe with celebratory boasts, gives the track its formidable edge while Kirk Franklin’s solemn reflections at the end of the song evoke bliss and loss in equal strength. West’s brilliant lyrical reservation (highlighted by repetition of phrases “We on an ultralight beam/This is a God dream”) throughout “Ultralight Beam” only worked to his advantage: sometimes the most powerful way to convey a message is by simply — and repeatedly — driving your point home.

— Candace McDuffie

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