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The N.Y. Times published the Top 10s of its four in-house music critics this morning, and the #1 album of senior critic Jon Pareles is Frank Ocean’s Channel Orange. “The moody introspection of a soul-ballad man fuses with the metaphor-making skills of a rapper in the sparse, aching songs that fill Frank Ocean’s official debut album,” Pareles offers. “Even with some resemblances to Prince and R. Kelly, he’s an unusual character for R&B: estranged but observant, admitting an attraction to a man, finding emptiness where others find material or emotional comfort. And in their sound as well as their lyrics, his songs create hollow spaces that they can only sometimes fill. As the tracks make eerie, restless dissolves between instruments and electronics, the songs melt down and recast themselves, again and again.” Here’s Pareles’ Top 10:  

1. Frank OceanChannel Orange (Def Jam/IDJ)
2. 
Fiona AppleThe Idler Wheel… (Epic)
3. 
Bob DylanTempest (Columbia)
4. 
Kendrick Lamargood kid, m.A.A.d. city (TDE/Aftermath/Interscope)
5. Grizzly BearShields (Warp)
6. Alabama ShakesBoys & Girls (ATO)
7. Norah JonesLittle Broken Hearts (Blue Note)
8. MetzMetz (Sub Pop)
9. Bettye LaVetteThankful N’ Thoughtful (Anti-)
10. DJ RashadTeklife Vol. 1: Welcome to the Chi (Lit City Trax) 

Topping his singles list is Bonnie Raitt’s “Not Cause I Wanted To.” As for Pareles’ fellow critics, Nate Chinen’s #1 album is saxophonist Tim Berne’s Snakeoil (ECM), with Ocean #4; Ben Ratliff’s topper is Cuban pianist David Virelles’ Continuum (Pi), with Ocean #5; and Jon Caramanica’s fave LP is Emeli Sandé’s Our Version of Events (Capitol), with Ocean again #4. Notice a trend here? [HitsDailyDouble]