100 Favorite Albums of 2025: 75-51

The list rolls on. You can check my coverage yesterday for list positions 100-76. Tomorrow I’ll discuss some duds, but for today, let’s crunch some numbers. As of the time I’m scheduling this, I listened to 399 releases from 2025, which includes LPs , EPs and live albums (not expanded editions or anthologies). I’m traveling over the holidays and coincidentally added one (1) to my playlist planelist, so I should end the year on an even 400.

383 of those were tossed into a ranked playlist, although 66 still remain unranked. 1,384 songs ended up in a general playlist of 2025 songs I liked, and 63 ended up on the longlist of favorites. My playlist of 2025 releases to listen to? It still sits at 134 albums. There’s so much music out there. Here’s 25 more of my favorites.


#75. Anamanaguchi – Anyway

Another surprising indie story, albeit less so than Panchiko. The old Brooklyn heads probably remember Anamanaguchi, the chiptune band from the early ‘10’s. Well after a long break, they’re back, but as a heavy indie band. They’ve ditched the Game Boys for guitars, and recorded a banger album in the American Football house. Imagine telling that previous sentence to someone over 50. Anyways, there are no growing pains, they just nail a heavy indie sound perfectly. No one saw this album coming. 

#74. Tiberius – Troubadour

Boston legends! There’s a handful of local albums on here. Like so many great bands, Tiberius started out as a solo project, for singer Tiberius Wright. What started as a solo country project has quickly morphed into a sort of heavy-indie-but-with-twang thing. I had high hopes for their third album, as an already established fan, but it over-delivered. These songs are fully engrossing, and while most build into surprisingly dense and loud places, some stay on a softer level. This is really a headphones album, one to put on and just get lost in. 

#73. cupcakKe – The BakKery

cupcakKe is usually a shoo-in for this list, and we’re glad to have her back. As just one man trying to keep a tally on 1000 artists, I unfortunately completely missed her comeback album last year (and will listen to it soon). So this was like a long awaited comeback for me (cumback?). Nothing’s changed – these are rap songs that are so hypersexualized that they easily transcend the comedy line. You have to know what you get with songs like “Moan-a Lisa.” And it’s not a gimmick, cupcakKe is a genuinely great rapper and clever lyricist, which blurs the line between genuine and parody. These songs aren’t just funny, they’re bouncy and memorable. Best song title of 2025: “One Of My Bedbugs Ate My Pussy.” Sorry, mom. 

#72. Margo Price – Hard Headed Woman

I don’t like most modern country, but the reason why I can never discredit a genre is because of people like Margo Price. I’m a longtime fan by this point, and Woman delivers what she does best: short, gleeful bursts of high-energy country. There’s no frills and few surprises, just a bunch of fun country tunes and soulful ballads. She’s always had a great voice and an ear for melody, with a lot of personality to boot. I would stop short of calling it true outlaw country – a subgenre I do love – but she’s far more Sturgill than Toby. It’s a real fun record folks, yeehaw. “Don’t Let the Bastards Get You Down” is the perseverance anthem of 2025. 

#71. Rico Nasty – LETHAL

Listen, I’m a sucker for music that’s fast and loud. That just goes across genres. I like thrash metal more than doom, bubblegum pop more than ballads, Vampire Weekend more than Sufjan Stevens. Rico Nasty tries her hand at a rap-rock album, and it rules. I was already a fan of Nasty’s high-intensity rap before this, and adding some rock elements only increases my personal potential of loving it. It’s a ruthless record that stretches boundaries, as it really does incorporate some of her softer elements too. But those are nice additions to the real attraction, boisterous and big rap-rock tunes. The label she’s on now? Fueled By Ramen.

#70. Modern Life Is War – Life On The Moon

I raised myself on street punk. Modern Life Is War, the legendary hardcore punk group, aren’t really in the same umbrella, but it scratched the itch. The band’s first album in 12 years is not really any less aggressive than before, a collection of urgent, angry but inherently melodic tunes. It’s not just 1234 and moshing to one chord, these are well-developed songs. They just also happen to be crunchy and angsty. Brings me back to my youth!

#69. Sasami – Blood On the Silver Screen

Sasami is nothing if not unpredictable. She’s an alternative musician at her core, which made her sophomore album Squeeze all the more surprising in 2022 – it was made in preparation to tour as an opening artist for a metal band. SIlver Screen overcorrects, with Sasami embracing her poppiest side. There are flares of guitars, but it’s largely poppy love songs, with occasional french horn. Also, it allowed me to get the best photos I’ve ever taken

#68. Scowl – Are We All Angels

Scowl have been one of the bands at the forefront of the unexpected hardcore revival, which makes this album all the more shocking. Not far into their careers at all, Scowl have matured their sound, stretching songs out and softening them. It’s similar to Mannequin Pussy’s 2024 album of the year candidate I Got Heaven, which saw the punk band embrace indie. This is still a little more hard-edged, but it’s less outwardly hardcore. I don’t actually think I like it as much as their previous releases, but that speaks more to how much I love Scowl. In a year where bands have expanded hardcore in multiple directions, this is the genre moving tenderly. 

#67. Unknown Mortal Orchestra – IC-02 Bogota

This is a bit of a weird entry, especially considering that UMO released some more “standard” music this year too. This is the second release in a series of instrumental albums, following an equally great Hanoi release in 2018. UMO have always balanced traditional pop songwriting with experimental noodling, sometimes moving way in either direction. This is the latter, a collection of songs – some quite lengthy – that work as melodic, fun jams. It’s the type of thing one can imagine being played at a festival, but not at a regular show. Much like many other artists on this list, UMO also released a follow-up EP. But it was, uh, fine. 

#66. Pissgrave – Malignant Worthlessness

I was iffy on the inclusion here – Pissgrave have stoked controversy in the past, and not in the good way. But when an album is this good, it deserves it. This is extreme death metal at its very peak, a relentless onslaught of riffs, scowls and graphic violence. In terms of pure, unfiltered metal, it’s maybe the best of the year. The only ones surpassing it are deeply ambitious releases, this is no-nonsense brutality. 

#65. Alien Boy – You Wanna Fade?

The shoegaze revival is here to stay, and Alien Boy are proof of it. Quite frankly, there’s multiple proofs of it across this list. Alien Boy have been around for a hot minute, but had a minor breakthrough in 2025 (at least from my vantage point, as a new fan). Their music is heavy, melodic and patient, with great vocal melodies mixed against walls of guitars. Like most revival bands, it isn’t strictly shoegaze, but something that ropes old school into more traditional alternative music. 

#64. Ursula – I Don’t Like Anything

Sometimes I have a lot to say about albums on this list. Other times, I can’t muster much beyond “this is some good ass hardcore.” Well, this is some good ass hardcore. In an era where hardcore is suddenly being thrust into the spotlight, mostly by bands trying to advance the genre, it’s great to have some good, new base-level standards. That’s not an insult, I’ve listened to more new ‘traditional’ hardcore in 2025 than I have any other year…ever? The revival needs the old style to bolster the new. 

#63. Danny Brown – Stardust

As Brown’s struggles with drug addiction worsened, he lost his identity some; he was stuck in a paradox where it was killing him, but fueling his creativity. Now clean, Brown has grabbed a new identity, surrounding himself with hyperpop musicians he has influenced over the years. He’s always had the nerdy, electronic element to his music; it’s just as easy to imagine Brown reblogging nightcore remixes as it is to imagine him in a club. He’s finally fully embraced it, eschewing traditional rap for EDM- and hyperpop-tinged hip-hop with guest spots reserved for artists with names like underscores and femtanyl. It’s his most eclectic work and, perhaps, his most unpredictable. The elder statesman accepts the understudies. Brown is best when he’s being insane, and this whole record is bonkers. He’s found a new identity, and it suits him well.

#62. The Swell Season – Forward

The score (soundtrack?) to Once is one of my most pivotal albums. It kept me going during a very tough mental health period in high school. Then a few years later, Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová released a snoozer of a follow-up and broke up their romantic relationship, and I kind of stopped thinking about it all. I didn’t miss anything – Forward is their first release since 2009, and it almost recaptures the magic. The slicker production and additional musicians lose the sort of spontaneous feel of Once, but the songwriting is just as gorgeous. The two continue to harmonize or grab full songs beautifully. There’s a lot of surprises here, from songs that build unexpectedly to late-album tracks that still try to prove a point. It’s beautiful folk music, and it’s still kinda weepy. Not that this matters, but as a fun tidbit: this was the very last album I listened to before I decided to close off my lists officially. I really didn’t expect it to be this great.

#61. Algernon Cadwallader – Trying Not to Have a Thought

This might just be the most unexpected record of 2025. Cadwallader were basically The Beatles of short-lived mid-10’s emo bands. If you weren’t in the loop, yes, that was a specific thing – bands that only existed for ~2 years, put out one album, and then would shuffle members with other bands to make new ones. Snowing were my favorite, but Algernon were the kings. They hung around longer than most, but still split in 2012. They’re back, and they sound exactly like they would if they had stayed together and ignored all other musical trends. It’s the same kind of emo, but poppier, more patient, and a little slower. To be honest, that’s usually the kiss of death for me, but it works incredibly well here. 

#60. King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard – Phantom Island

It appears that the quantity-over-quality days in the Gizz factory have ended. The band spent the early COVID years releasing tons of albums, many of which were decent but nothing more. Phantom Island is the only album the band released this year, similar to 2024’s sole offering Flight b741. This album was recorded in the same sessions and follows the same boogie, roots rock inspiration of Flight – except this release was recorded with an orchestra. It’s not faultless, but it’s one of their most fun records. Sometimes, Gizz are best when they don’t overcomplicate things and just jam out. Of course, “not overcomplicating” still involves an orchestra, because this is Gizz after all. Who knows what 2026 holds for Gizz, maybe we’ll get one groove record. Or maybe we’ll get five nu-metal albums. 

#59. Editrix – The Big E

Editrix are just cool, that’s all. The local post-punk group have released their best album, a work that’s wildly unpredictable and always fun. The name of the game is curveballs, with constant shifts in tempo, tone, and volume. Sometimes melody is sacrificed, other times not. These songs are very fun though, and when the melodies do shine through they just add some real spice. If you’re into the more fun, adventurous post-punk revival bands like Cheekface, then save room for Editrix. 

#58. Rosalia – LUX

If you’re reading a year-end list then chances are you’ve already got thoughts on this one. Rosalia has quietly become a global powerhouse, and albums like LUX easily highlight why. Her voice is operatic, and yet more than half the time she opts for a more sultry way of singing. Some of these songs are pop ballads, some are nightmarish indie, some are borderline a capella. It works best as a collection, different ideas battle each other. Rosalia is simply unafraid to take chances here, and nearly all of them pay off. This isn’t really a traditional pop album; it’s something much more than that. 

#57. The Beths – Straight Line Was A Lie

I have an interesting relationship with the Beths. I cite them as a band I love, and two songs on their first album – “Future Me Hates Me” and “Not Running” – I place among my top 30 or so all-time favorite songs. Yet, I wasn’t completely wowed by their first three albums. I love all of them, but I never go back to more than a few songs. I think that’s changed. The Aussie indie rockers have put out what is easily their most ambitious and adventurous record, one that isn’t afraid to go all out punk, or melancholic coffeehouse. The band doesn’t really leave their comfort zone but expand it, taking the ideas of their previous songs to further conclusions. It’s a well-balanced, emotional indie record. 

#56. Leikeli47 – Lei Keli ft. 47/ For Promotional Use Only

No, no, that’s the actual album title. A quick new release from Leikeli47, one of our nation’s more fun rappers, is also the first where we get the “real” Leikeli. She’s never really done any public appearances and has never divulged her real name – and only recently started performing without a full face covering for the first time. The aura complements the bouncy nature of the music well, adding intrigue to very straightforward tunes. It’s just very fun, big and loud. Sometimes we need that. 

#55. Pink Siifu – BLACK’!ANTIQUE

This is an artist I was not familiar with prior to 2025, and haven’t listened to anything beyond this album (yet). The formatting of title lives up to what this album sounds like – maximalist, dense rap. It’s dumbfounding, there’s always one too many things going on. I had to work to make my brain focus on any central melodies in some songs. It’s experimental to a fault, and ambitious as all hell. I’ve never really heard anything like this and I immediately wanted to dig deeper, even if it often made my tinnitus upset. And it isn’t a gimmick, there’s powerful and insightful music here, it’s just that some of it is hidden under a veil of misfiring noise. 

#54. Hallelujah the Hills – DECK

I went back and forth on how exactly to approach writing about HtH, a criminally-undiscovered Boston indie group who just celebrated their 20th anniversary. DECK is not one album, it’s four; the band released albums in 2025, all 13 tracks, with every card in a deck covered in the titles. It’s a cool concept, and obviously a hefty one, however I don’t think they’re all equal. “Clubs” was my favorite, and this placement represents where it would stand solo. But they’re all brilliant and if you like one, you’ll like the whole suite. All four albums hearken back to the days of Death Cab and Decemberists, indie bands that have some quirk, but don’t lean too much into the cutesy humility. These are patient, adult songs that happen to have some seriously catchy rhythms. The band isn’t afraid to let loose on the volume too, though they’re usually fairly restrained. If you’ve been missing the days of OG Los Campesinos!, then here’s four full albums to dig through. 

#53. L.S. Dunes – Violet

You may not be familiar with this group, but you are familiar with the members. L.S. Dunes ropes in musicians from Thursday, Coheed + Cambria, My Chemical Romance, and singer Anthony Green, who has a resume too long to reduce to a single band reference. It’s what you expect, hard-hitting but passionate and patient emo. These are well-crafted songs, and the balance between ideas is stronger than on their debut. It starts heavy before trailing off into more experimental territory, staying within the bounds of the members’ respective bands, but only barely. And of course, after all these years, Green still has one of the best voices in all of rock. 

#52. Ingrown – Idaho

The unexpected revival of hardcore music has seen bands take a formally isolated genre and blend it elsewhere. Turnstile and Mannequin Pussy rope hardcore into indie, while Knocked Loose is melting it in metalcore. But with this comes a need for good ass traditional hardcore, and that’s where Ingrown comes in – no gimmick, no filter. This is punishing, whiplash hardcore. 11 songs, 19 minutes of music. It’s well-produced and energetic, this is not a band resting on sound. Even with the brief runtime these songs are unpredictable. Oh, and it ends on a country song, too. They are from Idaho after all. 

#51. HEALTH – Conflict DLC

For the second straight album, industrial legends HEALTH have snuck one out in December behind the release of many best-of lists. This, alongside time, sleepiness, and overburdening ambitions, is why I don’t put my own lists until the last possible days. HEALTH are almost guaranteed entrants on this list, I love most of their albums. DLC is actually considered a continuation of their 2023 album Rat Wars, although I think it’s also a slight improvement. The album is top-heavy, opening with some blistering, thrilling industrial-metal, while the back half dips into some more electronic elements. As always, one of the highlights is how singer Jake Duzsik’s soft, vulnerable voice bashes against the relentless, pounding music. It’s what separates HEALTH from their peers. Not music for everyone, but boy is it fun. 


And that’s a wrap, on part 2. Part 3 comes tomorrow, and features the breakout punk band of the year, a trio of alternative rap heaters, the final release from a jangly British group, and a solo work from the quintessential millennial frontwoman.

As always, here’s five records that just missed the cut, in no order: The Weeknd – Hurry Up Tomorrow | Hunx and His Punx – Walk Out On This World | Home Is Where – Hunting Season | Cheekface – Middle Spoon | Clipse – Let God Sort Em Out

100 Best Albums of 2023: 25-1

Jump to: Songs | 100-76 | 75-51 | 50-26

I hope you’ve been doing a drumroll for four days, because it’s time: here’s my 25 perfectly ordered, objectively correct favorite albums of 2023. This has been a year of pleasant surprises, massive disappointments, and huge handful of wonderful discoveries. There are a couple big name artists on this list, and probably few surprises, but this final edition is mostly under-the-radar albums that I found myself returning over and over again. Happy new year’s folks, and here’s to another great year of music in 2024.


#25. Fucked Up – One Day

This album is suspiciously basic. Fucked Up have made careers out of universe-spanning, deeply complex and dense conceptual albums. Their last release was actually a four-disc, four-song “album” that was part of their ongoing Year of the ____ series. This album is back to basics hardcore, something they haven’t done in over a decade. It also proves that they can still put out one of the most brutal and blisteringly-intense albums of the year even with their ambition reined in 1000%. This album isn’t as good as, say, Dose Your Dreams or David Comes to Life, but its placement is a testament to how unbelievably good those heady, lengthy albums really are. The run this band has been on is unprecedented.

RIYL: Converge, Titus Andronicus, feeling angry every moment you’re awake

#24. Throat Locust – Dragged Through Glass

I’ve been going back and forth on the inclusion of this one, as it is just a 3-track demo EP. But if we’re calling it an EP, then it’s eligible for the list. There’s also little to say other than “it’s good ass death metal.” This is very standard death metal, with immaculate production and a confidence of a band that’s been doing it for decades. And they’re named after my favorite TAD song to boot. Metalheads, get this on your radar now. You heard it here first!

RIYL: Cannibal Corpse, Bolt Thrower, you know, death metal

#23. boygenius – the record

The first boygenius EP was near perfection, taking three of the brightest and best indie talents and tossing them all together. The full-length, initially a surprise but now a wildly popular release, only builds on it. There’s more diversity in the songs here, as some songs like “Satanist” and “$20” are closer to rock than you’d expect. Others, like “Not Strong Enough,” sound exactly like you’d expect a Julian Baker/Phoebe Bridgers/Lucy Dacus song to sound like. Soft, sensitive and sad. What makes boygenius work so well is that they clearly came together as friends first and musicians second. The interplay between the members is more natural than most supergroups. This could still be a one-off, but I hope we get more from the Traveling She’llburys. 

RIYL: Big Thief, Snail Mail, either being or loving a sad girl

#22. Noname – Sundial

For some reason Noname seems to have dropped off the radar. This came out in August but I only noticed in November. The reason could be, of course, her utter refusal to play by the rules of the industry. The rap icon has always worn her heart on her sleeve, unabashedly political and earnest in a way even the “political” musicians shy away from. In one key song here, she connects the dots on how superstars contribute to the country’s insultingly overinflated defense budget, namechecking Kendrick and Beyonce (and herself) for playing Coachella. On top of the refreshingly honest politics, there’s just great rhythms and raps here. These songs are quick, full and fun. It’s a short but intense rap record from someone choosing to stand alone.

RIYL: Flatbush Zombies, Clipping., getting nauseated at whatever the hell “hologram Tupac” was

#21. Black Country, New Road – Live At Bush Hall

Under normal circumstances, I would never consider a live album for a year end list, as they are collections of previous material, usually at least somewhat the artist’s best. But Black Country are never ones for normal circumstances. After dropping their first two albums in quick succession, their singer dipped. Rather than break up or hold tryouts for a replacement, they brought in a handful of guest singers and recorded a live album of entirely new material. And because this is Black Country, these songs are everything from smooth and jazzy to manic and unpredictable. The band loves to stretch themselves in every direction, ostensibly under the “alternative” banner but touching many different points. The use of multiple singers and a live setting lends a particular vibrancy to these tracks. On the DL, I didn’t care for their second album – and this one is a marked improvement! There’s something for everyone here.

RIYL: black midi, the Hold Steady, going to a classy party you’re dreading but having a surprisingly good time

#20. feeble little horse – Girl with Fish

This is the exact byproduct when you take 90’s fuzzed out alternative and channel it through today’s DIY bedroom movement. At only 26 minutes, this album looks slight. But jump in and you get a number of intricately-layered, crunchy and introspective alternative songs. They may be brief, but they are not underdeveloped. There is a painful earnestness to the vocals and lyrics of this record, which can often get buried (intentionally?) under the ceaseless distorted guitars. If you’re a sucker for 90’s grunge-adjacent sad rock, like me, then grab this one right away.

RIYL: Pavement, Hotline TNT, reading your old journal entries

#19. Young Fathers – Heavy Heavy

The British funk scene is strong right now, all things considered, and the biggest standout of 2023 was Young Fathers. The group has always embraced their funky ways, but “Heavy Heavy” is a downright party. It’s a short album, and the tracks don’t stick around too long, which only adds to the ambiance. Songs come and go, occasionally feeling incomplete, like wandering through a party listening to parts of conversations. But one thing is for sure: it’s impossible to not have fun listening to this.

RIYL: Sudan Archives, Four Tet, making friends with everyone at the party (i don’t know what this one is like)

#18. Boris/Uniform – Brand New Disease

The collaborative album from Boris and Uniform brings exactly what you would expect and, perhaps more importantly, a lot of things you wouldn’t. Japanese noise institution Boris have frequently left their comfort zone, releasing straightforward rock or even jazzier albums. But NY noise upstarts Uniform – who have graced my lists before – generally stay in one noisy, angry lane. This album is bookended by harsh, bitter and grinding songs that you wouldn’t want to play at a party. But in the album’s middle is some more meandering, introspective tunes. Frankly, I wasn’t expecting it. The whole end result is a well-rounded album that doesn’t feel constrained to the walls of noise music, but takes time to revel in them gleefully nonetheless.

RIYL: The Body, Melt Banana, thinking about an interaction that made you angry and getting angry about it again

#17. Genesis Owusu – STRUGGLER

Oh man I love this one. I had the lucky opportunity to cover Genesis twice this year and let me say, this man puts on one of the most thrilling live shows you’ll ever see. The tracks on STRUGGLER are very funky, very synthy, very jazzy and still shaped around conventional rock songs. Everything feels very simple, and yet it is a mindmeld of genre fusion. And it is done completely effortlessly. For a man with very little experience under his belt, Owusu has supreme confidence in the power of his tunes. That this is also a concept album – about still finding reasons to love and cherish in the midst of an apocalypse – only adds to the strength. I have said it before: get this man on your radar.

RIYL: Talking Heads, Parliament, dancing as the bombs fall

#16. The Hirs Collective – We’re Still Here

The metal band that made their name doing albums full of 90-100 songs that are all <1:30 made a bold decision: do something a little more normal. The album clocks in at 31 minutes, less than half the length of some of their bolder works, but features their strongest production and most well-written songs to date. The band ropes in elements of grindcore and black metal into a ceaseless aural pounding. As always, they’re joined by huge name guests, like Melt Banana, Shirley Manson and Soul Glo, among others. How hard does this band go? They did a two-month tour behind the album and didn’t take a single night off.

RIYL: G.L.O.S.S., The Locust, slamdancing until you get so sweaty that your mohawk collapses

#15. 100 Gecs – 10,000 gecs

Listening to the first 100 gecs album was a humbling experience, because it was the first time I felt too old for an album. I didn’t entirely “get” it, and thought it was wildly hit-and-miss. For whatever reason though, their sophomore album clicked. From ska songs about frogs to genuine nu-metal, this album revels in everything that is uncool, thus making it cool again. These two kids have firm control over the zeitgeist, bringing old influences into brand-new hyperpop madness. Find me an album released this year more unique than this.

RIYL: Fire-Toolz, Machine Girl, every song on every machine at an arcade playing at the same time

#14. Oozing Wound – We Cater to Cowards

Oozing Wound have long been one of my favorite metal bands, with a distinct blend of rough thrash and tongue-in-cheek, pessimistic vocals. Well, this album is different, as the band takes more of a grunge approach. The tracks are slower and even rougher, with less of a focus on vocals/lyrics. And I’m a massive grunge-head, so I think I like this one *even more* than their previous albums. The new direction blindsided me, but once I adjusted I welcomed it wholeheartedly.

RIYL: Soundgarden, TAD, committing vehicular manslaughter

#13. JPEGMAFIA/Danny Brown – Scaring the Hoes

Peggy and Danny have always been masters of the same thing – rap that exists on the fringe of the mainstream, balancing the precision of radio sweetness with the ambition of pure avant-garde, and both men have allowed their solo work to swing in both directions. On their collaborative album, they simply both do what they do best: wild raps with huge beats, over the top comedy and intensely catchy rhythms. There’s a certain sense of derangement here, comedically apocalyptic. It’s fun as hell. It was only a matter of time before these two linked up, and it produced some of the finest work of both men. Check out the bonus EP they put out, which is just as great as the album. 

RIYL: Run the Jewels, Denzel Curry, the Alfred Molina scene from Boogie Nights

#12. Pile – All Fiction

I’m all in on bands messing around with genres and experimenting, but sometimes you just need some good old-fashioned rock, too. Pile does get sympathy points for being a Boston group, but their newest earns a high spot solely on songwriting. This album is full of dense and conceptual alt-rock, often lingering towards post-hardcore rather than indie. The band favors complexity over melody, which makes for a general lack of earworms, but a tremendous amount of curiosity. This is a rare mix that demands immediate replays – and not because the songs are stuck in your head. Tremendously original stuff.

RIYL: Pissed Jeans, Big Ups, knowing that you have better music taste than someone else

#11. Mandy, Indiana – i’ve seen a way

There seems to be a growing trend in music to blend genres beyond the normal definitions. Now this has always happened, of course, but there are always new avenues to explore. Mandy, Indiana – hailing from Europe – are a moody but fun group that tosses elements of dark synth and noise rock into indie. The final concoction is one of the best debut albums of the year, and one of the most eclectic albums in general. Recorded in a cave, you’ve got noisy guitars, foreboding synths and lyrics all in French. And yet it’s groovy. I can’t figure it out, maybe you can. I found them on indie radio, but I also didn’t bat an eye when one of their songs was remixed by Clipping. It’s all over the place, in serenely unpredictable chaos. 

RIYL: Sonic Youth, Savages, the general feeling of confusion

#10. Jeff Rosenstock – HELLMODE

My favorite musician, so it’s almost guaranteed he’d rank highly here. Rosenstock made his name doing immature, lonely and inebriated ska-punk songs, so with each passing year, he finds his muses further and further away. This is his prettiest record, with a number of songs softer and/or poppier than fans are used to. This is maturity, and while his lifelong themes of jealousy, loneliness and occasional fun are still present, they’re now more nuanced and diluted. But it’s also still distinctly punk – 90-second bruiser “Head” is one of the wildest songs he’s ever done. Rosenstock may have changed a lot over the years, but he’ll never be different. Perfect sound, whatever.

RIYL: Against Me!, PUP, hangovers

#9. Caroline Polachek – Desire, I Want to Turn Into You

This one got super hyped, and for good reason. Polachek took her decent previous albums and elevated every single good element, giving us an unexpected classic on impact. Polachek has been pivotal in the mainstream development of hyperpop, and this may be the first album to successfully dilute hyperpop to a broader audience while still keeping it interesting. Really, it’s just a fantastic pop album, one that bangs start to finish. It’s all bangers, all songs that are fun and wildly unique. It rocks. Chances are, you know that already.

RIYL: SOPHIE, FKA Twigs, basement raves

#8. Margo Price – Strays

With a release date of January 13th, this is the earliest entry on the list, and it sat at #1 for quite a while. Of course, a country album was always going to be a longshot to be the chart-topper here at PGMR, but I do love a good one when I hear it. Price fine-tuned every track on this album so they are all distinct and memorable songs, and most of them are bangers; there’s no getting bogged down in repetitive weepers here. Throw in some guest spots from decidedly non-country artists (Lucius, Sharon Van Etten, and Mike Campbell, guitarist for Tom Petty), and you’ve got an absolutely delightful stew of songs that really sneak up on you. The album doesn’t feel memorable at first, until you realize your feet have been tapping the whole time, and you toss it on repeat.

RIYL: Nikki Lane, Jason Isbell, havin’ a cold one on a hot night

#7. Jessie Ware – That! Feels Good!

With an album title like this, you kinda know what you’re getting into. Jessie Ware’s fifth album doesn’t reinvent the wheel, because it doesn’t need to. It’s the biggest party of the year, an album chock-full of disco-pop bangers crafted solely to make you, well, feel good. If you gave these songs to a different artist, you could very well end up with overly-produced plastic slop. But with Ware, we’re gifted by her outstanding vocals and healthy touches of soul music. These songs feel startlingly original and earnest within the confines of a genre that often disavows that. It’s simply the most fun album released all year.

RIYL: Lady Gaga, Rina Sawayama, playing that funky music, white boy

#6. Bully – Lucky For You

After the year opened with a string of disappointing albums from artists I adore, I was delighted that Alicia Bognanno released her best album yet. This compact album follows in the ways of her previous three albums, of indie rock heavily influenced by grunge and, more specifically, grunge-adjacent 90’s icons like Dino Jr. and Pavement. These songs, largely inspired by the passing of Bognanno’s dog, are despondent and jealous, and her snarl has never sounded better. Crisp production matches her best songwriting yet. A late-album pinch hit by Soccer Mommy is great, but it’s not needed – the whole album is already a distorted, melodic and depressive home run. It’s gonna make you feel like shit, but it’s so catchy that you won’t even care.

RIYL: Screaming Females, Hole, obsessively checking your ex’s social media to see that yes, they’re still doing better than you 

#5. Kelela – Raven

Something about me, possibly evident from this list, is that I always tend towards the bangers. Nine times out of ten, I’ll choose the louder and faster songs, whether that’s hardcore or bubblegum pop. Well, this is that tenth time. The R&B singer’s sophomore album is so minimalist and so fluid that it serves as one long 62 minute song cut into fifteen tracks. The album rarely moves at anything louder than a whisper, resulting in something that’s both calming and haunting at the same time, somehow. And even though there is fundamentally very little going on here, it grabs you from the opening moments and doesn’t let go. The album never wavers or falters, staying remarkably consistent across all fifteen songs. It is smooth and addictive, with positive lyrics about inclusivity within the dance music scene. It’s soft and feel-good, admittedly a nice antidote to many albums on this list.

RIYL: The Fugees, FKA Twigs, sitting inside and watching the rain

#4. King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard – PetroDragonic Apocalypse; or, Dawn of Eternal Night: An Annihilation of Planet Earth and the Beginning of Merciless Damnation

Yeah, yeah, more Gizz. I’m fully initiated into the cult of Gizz. This album is about as ridiculous as the title implies, and they aren’t doing any favors to the naysaying crowd that for some reason thinks this band is to be taken seriously. This album – their second true metal album after Infest the Rat’s Nest – covers an extremely familiar Gizz topic: the apocalypse. In this one, the world is destroyed, and the survivors begin to praise a new god, in the form of a Gila Monster. Unlike their first metal album, which mind you was also about the apocalypse, this one is dense and slow. They’ve ditched the thrash influences that permeated both their previous metal album and some of the psych albums in favor of an old school hard rock album. It sounds similar to last year’s good-not-great album Ice, Death, Planets, Lungs, Mushrooms and Lava, in that everything feels very dense and murky. There’s a full production to this. It’s the opposite of Rat’s Nest, which wasn’t even recorded with the full band. It isn’t exactly the newest ground they’re treading in this one, but there isn’t another Gizz album like it, either.

RIYL: Deep Purple, Black Sabbath, cool little lizards

#3. Model/Actriz – Dogsbody

Bands often come out of the gate hot, but this is one hell of a debut album. This band occupies the same sort of paranoid noise hellspace that Daughters vacated (because there is no jail that Alexis Marshall is worthy of being buried under). These are songs that have a certain paranoia to them, but one drawn through patient melodies. It’s not really post-hardcore, but it’s even less anything else. It’s extremely noisy and crazy while remaining even-tempoed, like the anxiety of realizing you’re bombing at an important job interview. This music is straight up stressful. Fun for the whole family!

RIYL: Daughters, black midi, accidentally perjuring yourself in a court of law

#2. Liturgy – 93696

If you’ve ever seen movies like Come and See or Ikiru or even Requiem For A Dream then you’ve probably described them as “absolutely incredible and I never wanna watch it again.” Well that same logic applies here. Liturgy, a paradoxically religious black metal band, have dropped some classic albums during their run; but the last couple have been weak, and I didn’t think they had the juice left. Well, 93696 proves otherwise, taking everything they’ve done in their career from heady and complex metal to maximalist harsh noise, and throwing it all into one 82-minute long album. It’s too much for one listen – it is two discs – as it is just too heavy, too daunting. I haven’t relistened to this one yet, and I may never. But my brain, which often forgets songs and albums the second they end, remembers this one start to finish. Thank you for reading this list, this is the single heaviest album on it.

RIYL: Deafheaven, Thou, suffering from religious trauma

#1. Wednesday – Rat Saw God

Instant classic. You may have seen my songs list, where this band took up three spots – and the guitarist took another with a solo track. This album is proving as a worthy breakthrough for the North Carolina group, which defies all classifications while remaining grounded in a grim reality. The band was already making waves in the indie underworld for their blending of country, americana and grunge into something resembling early Wilco, Drive-by Truckers, or – strictly contextually – Neil Young. Songs like “Chosen to Deserve” have a lot of country flair, while “Bull Believer” is straight grunge, the heaviest song the band has recorded to date. Lyrically, singer Karly Hartzman explores all of the lonely alleyways of America; these are songs of teenage alcoholism, domestic disturbances, loveless marriages and days spent just passing the time. There’s a specific type of American loneliness that runs rampant on this album, something that isn’t necessarily sad but just exists. It’s more flyover state, but all Americans feel it. Ten years from now, we’ll be holding this in the same regard that we hold Sonic Youth in now. 

RIYL: Neko Case, Drive-By Truckers, visiting your hometown and realizing all your childhood friends are in jail 


Thank you for reading this or, at least, thank you for scrolling to the bottom. As always, there were tons of other records I wanted to write about but didn’t have the space. Just to highlight a couple, those are: Dryad – The Abyssal Pain, an awe-inspiring metal album that blends tons of subgenres into one; The Armed – Perfect Saviors, a once-pop-metal band turned indie in an album that’s suspiciously conventional; Purling Hiss – Drag on Girard, one that initially made the list but didn’t stick in my brain enough – think a rougher Dino Jr.; The Croaks – Croakus Pokus, a wickedly fun local band that mixes all types of folk from folk-punk to straight medieval music; Death Valley Girls – Islands in the Sky, a punk group I absolutely adore that is reluctantly growing up and moving towards indie – maybe their weakest album, and still almost made the cut.

My wrists hurt. See you next year!

20 Great Songs You May Have Missed From 2022 (So Far)

Look, it’s been a weird year. I don’t really want to talk about it. What I do want to talk about is music, always, and what I’ve found is that there’s been a ton of great, under the radar stuff this year. I may do a proper post about what albums I’ve loved so far in 2022, but this post is specifically dedicated to songs you may have missed. You don’t need two posts about how great Bad Bunny or Sharon Van Etten are. So this post is 20 songs, unranked, that I think you should hear. I didn’t put any effort into planning genres here, just grabbed 20 that I love, but there’s a mix from noise to ska to old school hip-hop!

8 Kalacas – “Frontera”

Coming out of the gates with a controversial choice, because I know some people don’t like metal, and some people really don’t like ska, so ska-metal might sound atrocious. But 8 Kalacas combines the two in a way detached from any dopey 90’s skacore done by ignorant white dudes. Not to say that the music isn’t fun, because it’s a guilty pleasure of a track, but there’s enough genuine artistic passion and seriousness in the lyrics – a tale about immigrating back to Mexico after the American dream has failed you – to present this as a woeful tune demanding of your attention.

FFO: Streetlight Manifesto, Soulfly, dancing and/or immigration reform


Börn – “Norn”

I know absolutely nothing about this band and, full disclosure, I only found them on a bigger blog doing this exact same type of midyear post. I don’t know how they found this band, a new Icelandic band who’s debut album has yet to muster 3500+ spotify plays for any song. But boy does this rip. This is the exact type of music I was looking for in my teens – guitar-heavy goth shit. This has the sound of a noisy, combustible no wave or noise rock band, but the vocals of something more gothic. It’s loud, melodic, dark and extremely sweaty. More of this, please.

FFO: METZ, mclusky, sweating your mascara off


Foxtails – “space orphan”

There’s a handful of albums I’ve listened to or added to lists to listen that were based off recommendations where I simply cannot remember where they were recommended to me. I jumped into this album entirely unfamiliar with the group, but based on the low-caps band name/album title/song titles and the cutesy album cover, I was expecting some tender indie. What I got instead was an inspired mix of alternative, violin, and scream-y vocals, not out of the realm of Defiance, Ohio, but less gimmicky then them too. This song is more representative of how much I loved the album in general, but it rips. There’s some very chaotic, downright uncomfortable stuff going on here.

FFO: Defiance Ohio, Gouge Away, having a breakdown in small town america


HEALTH/Ada Rook/PlayThatBoyZai – “MURDER DEATH KILL”

MDK ALL FUCKIN DAY

HEALTH is one of my favorite bands, and Ada Rook is maybe my favorite screamer right now, so this pairing just makes sense. The industrial group has been working with tons of artists – most notably Nine Inch Nails – across two collaborative albums. Results have been mixed, but this absolute ripper of a 2-minute song makes it all worth it. Music doesn’t get much more in your face than this, an absolute wicked aura matched only by volume. Seems intentional that the title matches the slogan of a wrestler who was once killed in the ring, revived, and tried to fight the paramedics to clear him to finish the match. I’m MDK affiliated.

FFO: Backxwash, The Body, light tube bundles


KRS-One – “Raw Hip Hop”

Thirty-six years into his career, KRS-One doesn’t have anything he has to prove to anyone, and he’s allowed to do whatever he wants. While his new album – his 16th(!) solo record – varies in quality, it’s got some bangers like “Raw Hip Hop.” It lives up to the title, with a first-person overview of the genre’s history from someone who’s always been at the forefront of it. His forceful rapping is mixed with a minimalist beat, resulting in an old-school sounding song from an old-school artist. It’s criminal that he still flies under the radar.

FFO: Q-Tip, Biz Markie, an era without Machine Gun Kelly in it


Leikeli47 – “Chitty Bang”

Okay so you probably have heard this song, as it’s being used in a TV commercial right now (don’t ask me for what, I tune those out), but it’s worth a mention here as the full song is simply a blast. The song opens the rapper’s excellent new album “Shape Up,” the first of many straight fun songs on a Side A that plays like one long party jam. Given that “Zoom” has well eclipsed 5 million Spotify plays and “Done Right” seems to be on TikTok a lot, I’m guessing – hoping – that Leikeli47 isn’t on these lists much longer.

FFO: Princess Nokia, Rico Nasty, that brief era where MIA was huge


Mammoth Weed Wizard Bastard – “The Harvest”

You’re right, I did want to write about this one partially because they have the best band name in music hands down. But I’ve been singing their praises for a few years now. I’m hit and miss when it comes to stoner metal, so it makes sense that I’d love this song that really toys with the format. It’s got the length (9:10) and it’s got the riffs – by god, does it have the riffs – but it’s also got spacey synths and dreamy vocals. It somehow sounds both warm and menacing at the same time, as if it is simply not of this planet. I’ll give you a few minutes to take a few tokes before we continue.

FFO: Blood Incantation, Neurosis, getting high in the forest and what, is that a UFO? is that a UFO?


Mattiel – “Lighthouse”

Mattiel is one of a handful of indie artists whose continued lack of mainstream success upsets me to no end. Their new album “Georgia Gothic” continues their trend of making very digestible indie tunes with diverse inspirations, but a complete sound. My personal favorite, “Lighthouse” is bolstered by horns and and an excellent, repeated vocal line. Songs like this were designed to stick in your head.

FFO: Sunflower Bean, Horsegirl, feeling restless on a nice summer day


MJ Lenderman – “Tastes Just Like It Costs”

The name MJ Lenderman has been on my radar for a bit but his recent “Boat Songs” album is the first release of his I’ve actually heard. His name usually comes up alongside folksier artists that I’m usually hit-and-miss on, so to hear an album of generally grungier, more old school alternative was a delightful surprise. This is possibly my favorite on the album, because I’m a huge sucker for a song that ends on a repeating line (as seen elsewhere on on this list). This is a poppy, fuzzy guitar song with a neat vocal rhythm, resulting in what Dinosaur, Jr. might sound like if J. Mascis was just a little bit playful.

FFO: Dinosaur, Jr., Pavement, flannel shirts


Otoboke Beaver – “I Won’t Dish Out Salads”

I picked this one up via a recommendation and only listened to it this week, and I remain confounded on how to even classify this band. It’s garage-punk, with the ferocity of noise and the vocals of something poppier. Too melodic for Melt Banana, too hardcore for J-pop, and the tracks are just the right length for grindcore (the album’s last three songs account for only 39 seconds of music). It’s fun, aggressive, and insanely melodic. There’s only one other band I’ve listened to this year that sounded similar, and they’re…

FFO: Melt Banana, Guerilla Toss, trashing the term “guilty pleasure” once and for all


Perennial – “Tooth Plus Claw”

I’m a little biased on this one, as I recently got to interview these fine folks about their excellent new album, but it’s one of my favorite songs from the year nonetheless. Perennial’s music is a blast in both ways, and this song works a mission statement – a bouncy dance-punk track that harmonizes fun and aggression, all wrapped up in 85 seconds. Some bands that came up in conversation were Be Your Own Pet & The Hives, and it’s hard not to see Perennial as a spiritual successor to both those names.

FFO: Be Your Own Pet, The Hives, chugging cold brew


PLOSIVS – “Hit the Breaks”

Somehow this supergroup comprising members of Pinback, Against Me! (Atom Willard!) and Hot Snakes seems to have gone completely under the radar. The opening song off their debut song definitely sounds like the latter band, an aggressive but melodic indie-punk ditty that sounds like it was designed to absolutely kill in a live setting. You could argue that we don’t need yet another jangly garage group – but when it sounds as good as this, who cares?

FFO: Hot Snakes, Les Savy Fav, dads that rock


Porridge Radio – “Birthday Party”

Naming a song “Birthday Party” and then repeating the line “I don’t wanna be loved” endlessly is the grimmest possible way to establish a song. But that’s what the indie group Porridge Radio is about. Add in the pained vocals, deceivingly catchy rhythms and faint sounds of kids in the background, and you’ve got one of the year’s most brutally depressing songs. It’s what to expect from Porridge Radio, and it’s done well across the whole album, but never as good as here.

FFO: Nick Cave, the sadder Los Campesinos! albums, working on your birthday


SOAK – “Purgatory”

We’ve seen an absolute glut of electric-acoustic indie with pretty vocals over the last decade, but it’s still so nice to find artists who can do it so well. This song, the opener to a very solid album, mixes comforting acoustic with more unpredictable electric rhythms and deceptively haunting vocals. Their voice sounds so, so much like Adrienne Lenker’s, which is to say pretty and haunting at the same time. The repetition on “I’ll be hungry forever” to end the song is an extra wrinkle on the song’s beauty.

FFO: Big Thief, Waxahatchee, autumn


Robert Stillman – “Cherry Ocean”

This song remains confounding to me. It’s just shy of 9 minutes, features just a few instruments and very hushed, difficult-to-decipher vocals. It’s the only song on the album with lyrics, as the album otherwise meanders around various subgenres of jazz. I *guess* this counts as jazz, too, but I’m not even comfortable with that label. All of the components of this feel warm – the piano drone, the sax, the quiet vocals – and yet the final product feels cold and questioning. The album’s title – What Does It Mean To Be An American? – comes from a different song, but in the year 2022 that is a menacing question, and this song reflects it. There’s practically nothing to pull from this track, and yet I keep coming back to it.

FFO: Mount Eerie, Gene Hackman playing saxophone at the end of “The Conversation”


Tropical Fuck Storm/King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard – “Satanic Slumber Party Part 2 (Midnight in Sodom)

Seemingly half of the current rock & punk bands I like come from Australia, so it only makes sense to see a team-up like this. I’ll admit I am not super familiar with TFS but Gizz has been my most played band each year since I got obsessed in 2018, and this song plays into their super wild side, just 6 minutes of chaotic art-punk that seems to never nail down any kind of central rhythm but also maintain just enough normalcy to not be pure cacophony. This song is pure, unadulterated fun. Gizz are by no means an undiscovered group but they released this split just weeks before their monstrous album “Omnium Gatherum” and it seems to have gotten lost in that album’s shadow. Also, be happy Gizz-heads: they’ve already committed to releasing 3 (!) more albums this year.

FFO: the better Animal Collective albums, black midi, riding a unicorn through a rainbow ocean


The Venomous Pinks – “Todos Unidos”

Ok so this song is actually 2 years old now and popped up on my radar last year, but the Arizona punk trio’s debut was finally released in June, so I’m counting it. Messy and angry, the song hearkens back to the times when hardcore punk was first burgeoning into the mainstream with its call to action and gang vocals. It feels refreshing to hear such straightforward street punk in an era where the genre label “punk” is arguably being thrown around too loosely. Given that they just wrapped up a tour with *the Dead Kennedys,* I would say to watch for this name.

FFO: Rancid, Pennywise, the great street punk bands from your hometown that split up to become firefighters


Weird Nightmare – “Searching For You”

Weird Nightmare is the solo project from Alex Edkins from METZ, but one listen to the song and you could probably figure that one out on your own. While the song is much more distinctly indie than anything METZ, the sweatiest band in the world, has done, it retains much of the same sound. Edkins still snarls his way through this slightly menacing track, and he remains infallible in his way of coupling melody and noise. This song takes heavy inspiration from some legendary 80’s/90’s guitar alternative, and we should be thankful for it.

FFO: METZ (obviously), Preoccupations, the crushing weight of a Tuesday afternoon


Zeal & Ardor – “Feed the Machine”

There weren’t a ton of albums I loved in Q1 this year so this new Zeal & Ardor album sat near the top of my list for a while. I truly don’t know why they’re not getting more attention than they are, though I blame the metal purists who demand every band follow the exact same script. Zeal & Ardor not only didn’t follow a metal script, they never even read it. This song – more indicative of how much I loved the album in general – starts with a damn stomp clap. The album takes black metal and incorporates elements of African music, chamber pop, industrial, folk, and just whatever the hell the band feels is appropriate. Nothing about it should work, and yet it does in a way that still makes metal feel fresh. Truly one of the best albums of the year so far.

FFO: Deafheaven, Author & Punisher, music that pisses off your parents and pisses off the people who make music to piss off your parents


Zola Jesus – “Sewn”

Zola’s new album “Arkhon” – only 1 day old at the time of me writing this – masterfully blends peaceful euphoria, haunting melodies and vengeful brooding into one album. My personal favorite from the album swings towards the latter, a menacing synth track that sounds like an animal creeping in the night. It hits remarkably well on the album, as the previous track is deceitfully melodic, but it works well as a standalone track as well.

FFO: Chelsea Wolfe, Jenny Hval, the Matrix nightclub scenes


And that’s 20! Thanks to anyone who actually read through all of this for some reason, I appreciate anyone so willing to discover new tunes! Also a shoutout to A Wilheim Scream, Blood Red Shoes & Thou, who all had songs that initially made the cut here before I swapped some around – I’ve loved these groups for years now. This was fun for me even if no one read it, so I’ll try to do another 20 at year’s end!