Year In ReView: A collection of Vanyaland’s favorite tracks of 2018

The year 2018 can, will, and should be defined by many things. But for us here at Vanyaland, it was the year of the song. 2018 was a fantastic year for music, singles in particular -- short bursts of sonic brilliance that hit like a fist and lingered like a kiss, all in line with our ever-dwindling attention spans. Over the past 12 months Vanyaland Editor-in-Chief Michael Marotta and Assistant News Editor Victoria Wasylak documented all these brilliant songs as they hit each day in their New Sounds and Fast Tracked columns, daily hype pieces presenting what, in our opinions, were the best tracks of that particular day. Below is a collection of those columns from Marotta and Wasylak, as they were written that very day, shaping the sound of Vanyaland as one based deeply in alt-pop, but extending out to reflect not only Boston's diverse music scene, but the varied tones around the world that made the year so great. This collection is likely different than the other Best of 2018 lists floating around the internet, and that's by design -- here at Vanyaland, nothing trumps our genuine interest in a song we love and admire.

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Alice Glass, ‘Cease and Desist’: January 24

New Sounds: Alice Glass grows bolder and colder on ‘Cease and Desist’

For ex-Crystal Castles singer Alice Glass, 2017 was, if nothing else, exhausting. After a solo tour with Marylin Manson, a defiant solo EP, and most important of all, standing her ground in a detailed account of the alleged abuse from former bandmate Ethan Kath, Glass forges forward in the new year, starting with new single “Cease and Desist.”

To the surprise of no one, the two-minute glitch-pop-rock tune offers emboldened solace for fellow assault survivors. It’s freaky, it’s unabashed, and it’s a major, confident departure from her “Am I worth it or am I worthless?” mentality from past tune “Without Love”. “This song is a call to arms for all survivors,” says Glass in the press release. “But being a survivor often means feeling afraid, it means sometimes feeling worthless, like you can’t go on. We need to fight back against those who have victimized us and against the feelings that tell us to give up inside. Sometimes we think we deserve the pain others have inflicted on us. This song is what I need to tell myself to get through each day, and what I hope other survivors can remember when they feel like they can’t make it through the darkness of their own recovery. Every day is a fight.”

— Victoria Wasylak

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