100 Favorite Albums of 2025: 100-76

Another year, another onslaught of albums I listened to once and feebly attempted to put into an order in early December. If you’ve stumbled on this page, or are even a fan of this blog I suppose, I’ve tried to give a little extra weight to some lesser-known artists here. This list is not devoid of superstars – PinkPantheress, Rosalia and Bad Bunny are undeniable locks – but I listened to so, so many albums from smaller artists here that I decided to bump acts like Pulp and The Weeknd, whose great albums both hovered around the #100 cusp. I don’t write for people who want their opinions vindicated, I write for people who are always hungry for new ones. 

I’ve also made a decision this year to combine multiple releases from an artist into one entry, because it happened so many times. There was a litany of follow-up EP’s and surprise second LP’s and what not, I didn’t want to cram the list with repeated artists. That said, let’s dig into it! 


#100. Greentea Peng – TELL DEM IT’S SUNNY

Every list has to start somewhere. Truthfully, I knocked a few higher-ranking ones off to favor Peng, a new discovery for me this year. Peng is a British singer who does a version of neo-soul that doesn’t so much check every box as it does write new ones to check. Kind of R&B, kind of indie, kind of rap, she’s a difficult one to pin down. The only thing that’s really consistent on the album is the level of fun, as she weaves through traditional soul and more experimental tunes. It’s sunny indeed.

#99. Geese – Getting Killed

I’m still not fully onboard the Geese train but I think I get it. If you told me one indie band was going to break out in 2025 and had me guess 100 bands, I would not have guessed Geese. The band does an extremely loose, jangly kind of indie that, when coupled with Cameron Winter’s abrasive and Dylanesque vocals, results in something supremely unpredictable and off-kilter. These songs range from melodic to fully insane, in a similar vein to black midi but less dense. I still don’t like “Taxes,” but some of the other tracks here did surprise me in a positive way. One of the most unique bands – and even if I’m not their biggest supporter, I’m so glad they blew up. People demand original music, and that’s what this is. 

#98. Horsegirl – Phonetics On and On

The pushback against sanitized music has been in full force in 2025, with a rebound in hardcore and punk on the center stage. But we’re getting a lot more jangly, unconventional indie as well. Horsegirl’s sophomore album is actually more varied than their debut, roping in some traditional, well-produced indie songs as well as offbeat, noodly ones. “Switch Over” was the lead single and best cut, and it sounds ripped from a Pavement album. Although I think I slightly preferred their debut, this is a nice advancement of their songwriting, and it’s unpredictable in the best ways. If you got into Geese this year, save space for a fellow barnyard band. 

#97. Julien Baker/TORRES – Send A Prayer My Way

This is match made in my personal heaven. I’m not a big fan of Baker’s solo music, even though I recognize she’s an insanely talented musician, but collaborations often bring out the best in her. I am a huge fan of TORRES, so my base level interest was high. I expected gay country, I got gay country. This is a soft, fun, low-stakes y’allternative album. The pair deliver exactly what you expect, and thankfully, it seems to have served as an elevated platform for the perpetually-underrated TORRES. Yeehaw! (Shehaw?) 

#96. Amaarae – BLACK STAR

When it comes to genres I don’t listen to as much like R&B, I tend to latch on to individual artists that really stick out to me. Amaarae is one of those, I’ve been a fan for a few years now. She doesn’t really have a base-level genre; her previous, R&B-heavy album Fountain Baby is what drew me to her initially. But this album is much more dance and pop inspired, and it’s chock full of bangers. It’s a very fun album, Amaarae lets her identity shine in a collection of big, bouncing tunes. Sometimes, it’s good to just start grooving on the subway. 

#95. Mizmor/Hell – Alluvion

Rifffffffs. I first discovered Mizmor through the collaborative album he did with Thou, Myopia, in 2022. Now, subsequently, I’ve used him to discover Hell (the artist). The Mizmor albums I’ve listened to have been marked by abject dread; punishingly slow riffs and dark ambient music that signify a black world of anguish far scarier than any black metal could produce. Hell provides some screaming to, you know, really set the mood. It isn’t actually the darkest area that this can be, because there’s a focus on real writing too. But still – four songs, 40 minutes, and one of the songs is only 4 minutes long. You do the math. 

#94. Viagra Boys – viagr aboys

Surprisingly, I’ve often struggled to click with Viagra Boys. Their post-punk aggression mixed with their spoken, humorous lyrics seem like something made for me. I mean, I’m a huge IDLES fan, and what are they besides a funnier IDLES? But this was the first album of theirs I really connected with; it’s loud, boisterous, funny as hell and still feels urgent. The theme here is the importance of comedy amidst rage. It helps that there’s more bangers here than previous albums, which is the band’s strong suit. There’s just a lot of crunchy guitar and genuinely funny lyrics here. 

#93. baan – neumann

Later on you’ll see some examples of bands who are taking the traditional shoegaze formula and messing around with it. This, by contrast, is just some really heavy shoegaze. They also don’t really stick to the formula, as their music approaches doom metal through its sludge and riffs, but it’s the inverse of bands warping shoegaze through indie. This is really gnarly stuff, and basically every song hits a higher high than I was expecting it to. Kill your ears. 

#92. Laveda – Love, Darla

This one took me by surprise! I was introduced to Laveda in the summer when I saw them open for Sunflower Bean, and I wasn’t super impressed by the live show. Each member had a different energy and the music felt ho-hum. In the studio though, they kick ass. This is one of the closest things to traditional ‘grunge’ that we have today (no, I don’t like using the G word). These are feedback-heavy songs of youthful angst. It maybe doesn’t have the manic energy of Hole, but I still think that’s the closest comparison. This was consistently better and gnarlier than I expected. The dream of the 90’s is still alive. 

#91. Orcutt Shelley Miller – Orcutt Shelley Miller

The band name and album title pull no punches. This is the debut record from the trio of Bill Orcutt (from Hairy Pussy), Steve Shelley (Sonic Youth) and Ethan Miller (Comets On Fire). While I’m not familiar with Miller’s work, and not very familiar with Orcutt’s, I am a lifelong Sonic Youth fan. This is less noise-influenced and more free jazz, meaning that it is still difficult music but not as abrasive. It’s thrilling far more often than not, and each song hits a bigger climax than you may expect. These are three experimental veterans who are just completely locked in. 

#90. Poliça – Dreams Go

This is not a band that I’m super knowledgeable on, but I’ve been a fan for a few years after stumbling onto their set at Riot Fest when I had time to kill. They were an odd booking, as their general indie-pop sound doesn’t mesh perfectly with the festival’s more punk namesakes. Their seventh album doesn’t take any grand swings, opting for a collection of electronica-pop songs that are just fun and well-produced. These songs are catchy, but still have their feet planted firmly in art pop. There is a lot of depth to these songs and they’re much better to get absorbed in as opposed to them getting stuck in your head. It’s pretty music, and most songs work very well. 

#89. Orbit Culture – Death Above Life

I’ve written about Orbit Culture in past years and I’ll say the exact same thing here: I love offbeat, experimental metal, but I think that in order to appreciate music like that, you need to understand the more conventional music that those bands launch off of. Orbit Culture are about as conventional as they come, a radio standard death metal band. While I’m ultimately ambivalent about a lot of death metal, something about these guys just sticks out to me. Their fifth album brings riffs, screams, and some blast beats added in for a touch. It’s nothing a metal fan hasn’t heard before, but it’s about as good as it comes. This album is missing that one big song, but it’s still consistent enough to make the list. 

#88. Pacing – songs

It’s a great title for one of the most unassuming musicians out there. Pacing, aka Katie McTigue, bounces between true bedroom pop and short, louder pop songs in the vein of Guided By Voices. songs finds marriage between both, but is more the latter. It’s a short album of short songs, some quick ideas on everyday things. The tracks are like little gumdrops, all very sweet and small. The first two songs here are “expired yogurt song” and “parking ticket song.” These are slices of life, small inspirations into normal frustrations. 

#87. Japanese Breakfast – For Melancholy Brunettes (& sad women)

Former list-topper Japanese Breakfast are still on a global victory tour after a prolonged mainstream breakthrough. It follows in the footsteps of 2021’s Jubilee, a collection of indie-pop songs that are just absolutely pleasant. These songs aren’t necessarily joyous, but they all have an infectious energy that is never plastic or plastered. The vibes are natural. This is a bit of a step-down from Jubilee, but, again, that album topped this list. Jbrekkie can do no wrong, and this is just another omelette in one of the most digestible catalogs in all of indie. 

#86. Saba/No ID – From the Private Collection of Saba and No ID

Saba is low-key one of the best rappers in America right now, and even a more low-key collaborative album can prove it. Private Collection mimics the title, as this album never feels like a grandiose statement and more like two guys just locking in and grooving. It’s a jazzy album, and Saba’s flow remains impeccable throughout. Saba isn’t exactly unknown, but he should be much bigger than he is. 

#85. yeule – Evangelic Girl Is A Gun

Every year sees a lot of new discoveries for me, and even after two listens I still don’t really know much about yeule. I haven’t heard yeule’s previous three albums, but the internet tells me they are more glitch and dream-pop oriented, and that Gun represents a new direction. This is a collection of artsy pop songs, each one following a traditional pop songwriting structure while always threatening to diverge into something more chaotic. It’s fun, even if the songs are about personal struggles. It’s an abstract work, while maintaining graspable rhythms. It’s unsurprising to learn that they’re also a painter – listening to this feels like watching someone paint.

#84. Hannah Francis – Nestled in Tangles

Chalk this one up to word of mouth. I saw multiple writers and publications hype this one up, and I’m glad I saved space for it. This is a pretty brilliant little folk album, with a lot of creativity and patience in its songwriting. These are mostly longer, more drawn-out songs, with great vocals and a lot of brass accompaniment. A handful of these songs have horns, but not so many that it feels like a gimmick. Tangles is easy on the ears, a soft but not minimalist collection that is easy on the ears and sounds just like the twisting trees displayed on the cover. 

#83. Wooll – Thistle

I go back to day one with Wooll. I was lucky enough to premiere their debut album, as well as their sophomore record Thistle. Lovely people and lovely musicians, this is an indie dreamscape. Where Unwind was very dreamy in a fun way, this shows a few cracks into more of a nightmare. I would still count this as something close to dream-pop, but it’s denser and darker than Unwind, working as a nice complement. I can sum it up like this: it’s just really nice music to listen to. It’s pleasant on the ears, and the songs are catchy without being saccharine. They’re original while sounding familiar, and it’s something to go back to many times. 

#82. Kevin Abstract – Blush

There may not be a more fitting moniker for any artist out there than Kevin Abstract. The rapper, who made his name in the prolific and experimental group Brockhampton, has always been one to push the boundaries of hip-hop. While “experimental hip-hop” is usually mostly synonymous with “abrasive,” Abstract always weaves in artistic elements. It’s always some combination of graceful, profound, R&B, alternative, hard rock, etc. On Blush, he instead curates a selection of songs. Almost every track here contains a litany of guests – and the ones that don’t are mostly credited to other artists. Danny Brown, Dominic Fike and Quadeca get their own individual songs, among others. It’s not dissimilar to what Brockhampton did, except that that was a group with about 100 guys in it. For a solo album, it is conceptually, well, abstract. And it works, it’s a constant change of pace with a million different tones, all working together as one. 

#81. Sunset Rollercoaster – QUIT QUIETLY

Sometimes band names make sense. Like a lot of acts on this list, Taiwan’s Sunset Rollercoaster were an entirely new discovery to me this year, and it’s just delightful. I normally don’t necessarily like “happy” music, as I often find it either hollow or forced. I think pigeonholing this as “happy music” is also rudimentary, but this is really feel-good stuff. Jazzy, poppy indie that’s always interesting and just unique enough to be both familiar and new. It’s a breezy, clever work. If a lot of albums on this list are poison, this is antidote. 

#80. Miya Folick – Erotica Veronica

There were a handful of albums on this list that I really liked immediately, only for them to fade from memory (and a few fell off the list completely). Folk singer Miya Folick’s third album had the opposite effect. I listened to it on a morning commute, thought it was great but not on par with her previous effort, and then just…kept thinking about it. It’s a deceivingly great folk-rock album, with a lot of subtle beauty and outwardly great rhythms. It is humble music, yet grabs your attention for the whole runtime. Folick is still getting grounded and already has a lot of buzz – watch for her almost-inevitable elevation.

#79. Suzie True – How I Learned to Love What’s Gone

Chalk this one up to “it’s just me music.” I love Suzie True, and I loved their new album! The band’s squeaky clean but fiercely energetic power-pop scratches an itch that I get frequently. The band is in the same league as Beach Bunny, writing taut, power chord-driven ditties that maybe don’t qualify as “punk music” but sound real damn close. They definitely slow things down more on this go-around, opting for a broader spectrum, but it all works. A short, fun little pop-rock album.

#78. Disiniblud – Disiniblud

On a similar note to Sunset Rollercoaster, this is one of the more intriguing and lighter albums on the list. Disiniblud is a new group, a collaboration between Rachika Nayar and Nina Keith, two experimental artists that I was unfamiliar with individually. I don’t check out a lot of experimental music, but this was an absolute pleasure. It finds the border between melodic and ambient, with a lot of mid-song gear-switching. The songs are all unique, warm and cared-for. There are familiar melodies and sonic deviations, resulting in a wholly unpredictable album that never gets grating in the way that some experimental works do. This won’t have a wide audience necessarily, but it’s extremely satisfying.

#77. Panchiko – Ginkgo

Call it a comeback. One of the wilder stories in music history, Panchiko released one demo and crashed out in obscurity in 2001. 15 years later, some random person with clout got that demo trending, and now they’re global stars. Their second album is a beautiful collection of dream pop and slowcore, music I am not usually attracted to. Each song is unique, though, and each one is treated with explicit care. This is maybe the most tender album I listened to this year, like a warm hug. It never retreads ideas, yet is one complete whole. I really expected a collection of repetition, but I ended up wowed on every track.

#76. Jeff Tweedy – Twilight Override

There’s two kinds of people out there – people who recognize that Jeff Tweedy is one of the all-time great American songwriters, and people who haven’t awakened yet. Even in 2025 there isn’t nearly enough respect put on his name. Tweedy has been cruising since 1990, as the frontman for Uncle Tupelo (1990-1994) and Wilco (1994-present), but his solo career has been lowkey and quiet. This album is full of songs that are hushed folk-rock tunes, and I mean full of them – it’s 3 discs, 111 minutes and 30 songs long. In criticism, plenty of the songs on discs 2 and 3 feel inconsequential. But Tweedy’s whole concept is about the importance of creativity, so why not include everything? Besides, it’s always pleasant to hear him strum away. This one might only be for the Tweedy heads, but I urge everyone to cherry pick some tunes out of this. 


Part 1 is done! I hope you found some gems, there’s some real nuggets in this section. Join me tomorrow for part 2, where you’ll see a behemoth of a project from a Boston indie group, some industrial metal, one of the biggest pop albums of the year, multiple hardcore releases and possibly the best emo reunion album ever made.

Here’s five albums that just missed the cut but still want to shout out: Die Spitz – Something to Consume | Jane Remover – revengeseekerz | Anika – Abyss | Lorna Shore – I Feel the Everblack Festering Within Me | Tunde Adebimpe – Thee Black Boltz

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