101 Favorite Albums of 2024: 49-25

Tired of me yet? I hope not, because we’re only halfway through my favorite albums of 2024! As stated, there was an insurmountable amount of excellent new music this year, even more so than other years. There’s tons of probably excellent albums still on my list, unlistened to. This top 101 is only a small sampling of the excellent music released this year. I hope you find something on this list that’s appealing to you, and that you fall down a rabbit hole because of it. I rated everything I listened to this year, and this portion of the list is in the healthy 8/10 to 8.5/10 range.

Nearly all of these write-ups are copied directly from other previous posts on this blog. I’m editing them but please keep that in mind in case there’s a nonsensical reference or anything.


#49. Tyla – TYLA

This one came to me via recommendation, and I’m indebted because I loved this. I’m normally hit-and-miss on R&B, but this was pretty much all hit for me. It’s worth noting that I chose to listen to this on an evening where it was very nearly 100 degrees, and this is hot weather music. It expertly blends many different pop music influences, roping afrobeats and R&B into African pop. It’s also very sultry music, as sweaty as this heat-stroked listener was. This has the makings of a third or fourth album from a big-name artist who is priming themselves for an arena tour – not a debut from a hot but still underground artist. It’s an extremely impressive debut, one of the best of the year. She’s gonna be huge in no time.

#48. Perennial – Art History

I have had the absolute pleasure of interviewing two members of this band, two people as bubbly as the music is. I’m a massive sucker for mid-00’s dance-punk, a la The Hives and Be Your Own Pet, and that’s exactly what Perennial does. Their third album continues the trend, just a bunch of quick little blasts of melodic punk. No song sticks around long – the record is 12 songs and 21 minutes. Most of them are sonic blasts, high-energy party songs, with a couple more experimental tracks (or segments) thrown in to break the pattern. Clean guitars, dual vocals and nonstop ferocious energy will make you feel like you’re in a club in 2005 seeing a great short-lived band with a terribly long and stupid name all over again. This is punk for everyone, get to this one immediately. Long live Perennial. 

#47. Julie Christmas – Ridiculous And Full Of Blood

I almost made it all the way through the year without knowing that Julie Christmas put out her first record in a decade. This utterly deranged lady used to sing for a band that is quietly one of my favorites, Made Out Of Babies. Her third solo record follows in that band’s footsteps exactly, with a number of intimidating and turbulent post-hardcore songs. Her screamy vocals sound exactly the same as they did a decade ago, she hasn’t lost the touch. These songs are loud, relentless and quite frankly, a bit unsettling. Her vocals have always had the urgency of someone who needs to go to the hospital. The music is boisterous, but always stays restrained enough to really let Christmas shine vocally. It’s intense stuff – and not on enough radars. 

#46. Yard Act – Where’s My Utopia?

I somehow completely missed Yard Act’s first album, but their 2023 standalone single “The Trench Coat Museum” completely roped me in. Their second album regrettably doesn’t feature the song, but it follows in the same trend – tongue-in-cheek music that blends post-punk through indie. It’s one of a hundred great post-punk albums this year, and maybe the best of the lot. The band is a lot heavier and faster than, say, Cheekface, but with the same humor and spoken-word vocals. “We Make Hits” is one of the best songs of the year, a meta song about selling out in the face of global destruction that sounds ripped from the LCD Soundsystem playbook. The band never stays quiet or complacent, adding riotous elements to practically every song. Even the lengthy “Blackpool Illuminations” seems to be a self-reflective ballad, before it turns into James Smith arguing with himself through two mics like an old Jim Gaffigan bit. It’s riveting stuff. Maybe it’s a little difficult, but I can see it having a broad appeal.

#45. Los Campesinos! – All Hell

I feel like I’ve grown up with Los Campesinos! Truthfully, I have. You look at the bouncy, quirky and goofy indie they were doing in 2009 and compare it to this record. I’ve been around since day one, and it’s so great to see the band come back to take a victory lap like this. This is the most mature they’ve ever sounded, a healthy mix of bombastic songs and quiet burners, an expected mix of lyrics that are both tongue-in-cheek and brutally emotional. The band has always been openly left-wing, but they’re unfiltered here, to great success. They’ve shaken off the directly catchy, vocals-and-bells rhythms of yesteryear in favor of indie that’s patient and introspective. That’s been the case for a while, but even more so here. The band sounds both calmer and angrier, an effect of maturity. But don’t think that it’s all a serious affair, we’ve still got songs like “Adult Acne Stigmata,” “Hell In A Handjob” and “The Coin-Op Guillotine.” Yet another winner from one of the strongest catalogs out there. 

#44. Tyler, The Creator – CHROMAKOPIA

Few artists have grown and changed like Tyler. This is so flagrantly not the same man who made Goblin. I couldn’t shake the feeling that Tyler is the musical equivalent of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, in that he always manages to play off the zeitgeist. In 2011, he was making homophobic jokes and brash public statements. In 2024 he’s vulnerable and telling stories about trauma. Sure, chalk it up to maturity, but I think it’s more calculated than that. Tyler innately knows what gets people going. In fairness, I totally shunned Tyler because of his lyrics until Flower Boy, never gave him a fair shot. I still haven’t listened to his older music. But I loved Call Me and I pretty much love this. He’s a full-on raconteur now, embodying characters that blur the line of reality (including a first-person from a female POV). Most of these songs are self-reflective and depressing, but not in the paranoid way that a lot of other rappers have adapted. These are just songs about pointing out your failures and flaws. It’s one of the most earnest records of the year, even as Tyler sings in character. But also, some of them are just funky and funny, too. It’s well-rounded! 

#43. Porridge Radio – Clouds In The Sky There Will Always Be There For Me 

Another winner from one of the most unique acts in indie music. The British trio makes indie music that is at home with bands like Built to Spill, but might make listeners a little uncomfortable. Singer Dana Margolin has a gritty voice resembling Francis Quinlan from Hop Along, but with a backing band that’s filtered through the looseness of Hole. The whole album is off-the-cuff and extremely raw. It could even be more Tom Waits than anything. The music this band makes is wholly unique, and it’s fair to say that some normal indie fans will be turned off by it. But I’ve them hot on them for a few years now, and this is a real standout. 

#42. The Messthetics/James Brandon Lewis – The Messthetics & James Brandon Lewis

I love jazz, but I simply never keep up with any new jazz. The description for this hooked me, though, due to who the Messthetics are – they’re the rhythm section of goddamned Fugazi. And this album is exactly what you get when you take a bunch of punk veterans who have transitioned into jazz. It’s hot, often very free-form and improvised but never so much so that the songs lose structure. Most of the tracks are uptempo, aided by the full-album collaboration with saxophonist James Brandon Lewis. This album is, just to put it simply, hot and undiluted fun. A hearty recommendation to anyone, even folks who don’t spin jazz. 

#41. Latrell James – Running In Place

If I had to pick a word to describe this album, it would be: vibrant. The local (Boston) rapper’s new album is quick and diverse, a bunch of short songs that range from muddied to sweet. Mostly, the album is very fun. Pristine production is a key factor here, making the brightest songs pop with effortless energy. No idea sticks around too long, making every song seem like a fleeting thought in a complicated mind. There’s some easy, brilliant stuff happening here. 

#40. Gouge Away – Deep Sage

I love Gouge Away, some good ferocious hardcore with melodic punk woven in. There’s tons of bands that sound like Gouge Away, and yet they’ve always had something distinct I can never put my finger on. It might be Christina Michelle’s profoundly intense vocals, or the fact that the band always seems to straddle the hardcore and post-hardcore line – two genres similar in name only. Their newest release takes a slightly softer approach, with more patient songwriting and more downtime across the record. It’s still mighty, it’s just more vulnerable as ever, too. I’m not sure if the enhanced formula works quite as well as the original one, but I think further listens will truly determine that. It might just be that this album is more of a grower than previous ones. Either way, it’s still one of my favorites of the year. The grading curve is high

#39. Magdalena Bay – Imaginal Disk

I was hesitant to even put this on my radar because the year is so clogged with excellent indie and the record is so long that I wasn’t sure I’d get around to it. But rave reviews of both professional and personal manners convinced me – and it’s fun as hell. A loaded but never bloated indie-pop record, this one is not afraid to take chances. One song might be bouncy, standard indie-pop a la Charly Bliss, the next might be jazzy indie. The duo jump into 70’s ballads and drone guitar on a whim. A curated tracklist means the more ambitious tunes elevate the more standard tunes, so they all bounce off each other rather than seem like hits-and-filler. It’s nearly an hour and yet there isn’t a skippable moment. I’m not sure if I ever heard their debut album, but this sophomore release feels like a true mission statement. Don’t sleep on this one. 

#38. The Cure – Songs of a Lost World

I’ve never been the biggest Cure fan, mildly appreciating their hits but never digging much further in. I’ve stated this elsewhere, but a lot of new wave and 80’s alternative bands are ones I’ve only recently gotten into, Cure included. This album is not close to my base knowledge of the band, but/and it is extraordinary. Every song is agonizing slow, often several minutes until we hear Robert Smith’s gorgeously pained vocals. This is a personal and grim album, even by Cure standards, but it isn’t totally bleak. It’s the musical equivalent of grieving, with the sparks and pains of the ups and downs. It’s all midtempo, which is almost always a death knell for me – but it all works. Every song is excellent. The Cure could’ve hung it up or kept touring on legacy status, but their first album in sixteen years is an instant bonafide classic. Occasionally, the biggest bands really do put out the best music.

#37. Geordie Greep – The New Sound

Geordie Greep has lost his goddamn mind. The former frontman for black midi is on his own after the band’s sudden break-up. The indie band was already bizarre, but now Greep is in full control and he’s unrestrained. The core of this album still sounds like black midi, with rapid-fire songs filled with staccato and unpredictable rhythms and a lot of talk-singing, to where the end result feels like musical vertigo. But he’s also added Latin elements, jazz, blues, bongos, a lot of paranoid oomph, and just even more unpredictability. Oh and there’s the genuinely moving cover of a 40’s pop song that closes it all out. It’s an impressive solo debut, especially for one as wildly ambitious as it is. If you liked black midi, as I often did, then you’ll like this. 

#36. Avalanche Kaito – Talitakum

I have no clue where I pulled this one from, and I wonder if I stumbled on it while forgetting the name of Hiatus Kaiyote (who put out a great record this year). I put this one on completely blind, and my god, I loved it. It combines two things I love – noise music and African music – into one. Traditional African rhythms are deployed courtesy of singer Kaito Winse, while he’s backed by a noisy duo from Belgium. The result is a downright thrilling and unpredictable album that stays on the fun side of experimentation without sacrificing energy. This is the type of thing designed exactly for me, and I can’t wait to dig into their previous albums. It’s tough to talk about highly experimental music like this, but if it sounds up your alley, then it probably is. Definitely one of the better releases this year.

#35. BRICKLAYER – BRICKLAYER

Haha this rocks, what a surprise. Another local winner, and one I’ve stumbled onto while knowing absolutely nothing about the people behind it. This quick little debut (I think?) album comes rife with indie-punk jams, guitar-heavy and fun as can be. The band describes their own music as danceable thrash, which is pretty accurate. It’s not out of league with, say, The Hives. These songs are quick, many of them raucous but clean and bouncy. Can’t wait to hear them on a stage at some point. “Gay Breakfast” is already one of my favorite songs of the year. Editor’s note: This band has already, unfortunately, broken up.

#34. Full Of Hell – Coagulated Bliss

If you asked me to list my favorite metal bands, I’d list a couple of heavy-hitters before spouting Full Of Hell right out. The extreme metal band has been pushing the sonic limits of metal and noise for years now, in between more experimental collaborative albums. But their latest solo (?) album takes a half-step back. Sure, these songs are still ostensibly grindcore, often clocking in at under 120 seconds, but there’s elements of hard rock and classic heavy metal thrown in. There are breaks, and more development to (some) songs. I mean look at the cover – their previous non-collaborative albums all feature dismal black and white art, but this one is vibrant. It represents a minor but maybe necessary shift in their music. This record fits in with the others, but has enough going to stand out, too. Plus, there’s plenty of classically abrasive bruisers. Great stuff from an always excellent band. People going in thinking “metal” may mean something like Sabaton are going to be shocked and disappointed, but for those that like the experimental noise, this is the one to beat. 

#33. Xiu Xiu – 13″ Frank Beltrame Italian Stiletto with Bison Horn Grips

Let this be a lesson to all musicians out there – you can just call your albums anything you want. The experimental band’s fourteenth (!) album tones things down a little bit, but still brings in a lot of competing ideas and emotions. It’s riveting at times, other times just funny or horny. It’s always fun, even if it challenges your preconceived notions of song structure. If you must toss Xiu Xiu into a genre, it’s alternative, but only some songs really resemble anything indie. I can’t say I’m an expert in their music, but I will be soon. This is the third album of theirs I’ve heard, and the third I’ve adored. 

#32. girl in red – I’M DOING IT AGAIN BABY!

I’ll admit that I went into this one with low expectations – girl in red’s debut album was a bold mix of indie and trap influences, but something about it really didn’t grab me personally. Obviously I was alone, as it immediately launched her into a stratosphere rarely seen by indie artists. Well I’m aboard now, because this sophomore album is a blast start to finish. These songs are abrupt, and mostly very energizing and manic. When they’re not, they’re sweet and earnest. It’s a mix of stuff more chaotic and varied than her debut, and all the better for it. At only 27 minutes, the only real downside is that it could’ve used some more.

#31. Lily Seabird – Alas,

Another local indie artist I know little at all about. Shout out to Allston Pudding radio for introducing me to this one (hey Andrew, when does it air? Every Monday 4-6pm and Tuesday 10-noon EST!). This album has all the makings of a quaint little affair, but some of these songs get deep and heavy. The heavier songs start to take on a 90’s fuzzy quality, even shoegaze-y at points. But not all the time, often Lily keeps things softer. Everything works, there isn’t too much of a good thing. Every song feels introspective, some feel vulnerable while some feel distant and cold. This is earnest music, and that something so well-developed and well-produced can come from an upcoming indie solo artist like this is just impressive. To be blunt, I loved this. 

#30. Cindy Lee – Diamond Jubilee 

I realize the placement of this one is actually low compared to most other blogs and publications. This album – originally only available in physical formats and YouTube – is quietly dominating the year-end list game. The expansive indie album from the drag queen persona of former Women frontman Patrick Flegel is a throw-everything-at-the-wall release. It’s an eclectic mix of psychedelic pop, 60’s R&B, indie rock, garage music, and about 100 other things. The album embodies the old school feeling of dumpster diving through the $1 bin at a vinyl shop and finding some forgotten Motown gems. The album intentionally doesn’t flow, so that one idea sounds different from the previous one, yet all fits within one wide umbrella of 60’s influences. Detractors will say the length is a problem – and to be honest, I agree. At 32 songs and 122 minutes, it’s too much; every song is neat, but the ones where Lee is really cooking make some of the more meandering, noodly ones feel a bit unnecessary. However, this one is a massive achievement, and simply unlike anything else released this year. Or, possibly, ever.

#29. Charli XCX – BRAT

The other album dominating the year-end list game. For years, Charli XCX has been in sole possession of a sweet spot in pop music. She’s consistently made music poppy enough for wide appeal, but weird enough to avoid Top 40 weight and arena tours. It’s allowed her to keep getting blank checks to make big-budget weirdness, with time to exist in the fashion and modeling worlds. Put simply: she’s the coolest artist around. So I was disappointed in her 2023 album Crash which, despite the literal car crash cover, was her most conventional album since her rudimentary debut. I was afraid to address it at the time, solely because I was worried that that path would continue. It didn’t. BRAT is completely wild. This is hyperpop at its finest: boppy and melodic, but extremely unpredictable and glitchy everywhere. No, not on the level 100 Gecs or anything, but still chaotic. Save a couple of more tender songs, these are jams.

Charli has spent years branding herself as a cold, partying brat with an impressive clique – “Mean girls” backs this up. But despite this image, Charli is very upfront with her emotions on this record. There’s songs of self-doubt and gender questionings. These are vulnerable songs, sung loudly, but still masked behind boisterous music. The lyrics are there for dissecting, but they’re easy to miss as well. That I picked up on all of this in one listen is itself impressive – I normally don’t pay attention to lyrics much on the first go-around. This is such a complete portrait of an artist who knows her personal strengths and weaknesses. I don’t really listen to full records multiple times unless they’re instant favorites, but I will for this one. It demands it. Maybe it’ll be a favorite anyways. One of the best pop records of 2024, easily.

#28. Salt Cathedral – Before It’s Gone

I heard one of the songs from this album on the radio many moons ago and kept a mental note to check back for an album. Finally, it’s here, and it’s glorious. There’s nothing particularly inventive happening here, yet it all feels original. I know little about this duo, but what they make is beautiful. This is atmospheric indie, almost gospel-like. There’s always rhythms, but some are fainter than others. Some exist only on a breeze and a vocal lick, others bring in hand drums and conventional pop songwriting. Add in some authentic and balanced lyrics, and you’ve got a multi-influenced gem of a record. This is pop music for people who don’t like pop music. Real winner!

#27. Amyl & the Sniffers – Cartoon Darkness

I’m a simple man, if a song has fast guitars and Amy Taylor yelling some curse words at me in a thick Australian accent, then I like that song. I absolutely adore Amyl & the Sniffers, and their third album is chock full of drunk-punk goodies. These songs are exactly what you expect and exactly what they need to be – a collection of fast and loose punk songs that are sometimes about vulnerability, and sometimes about hammering down some beers. While the band ventured out into more exploratory terrain on the second album, they double back down into fun punk here. Uncoincidentally, I like this record more than their second one (their debut remains an all-time favorite, though). Put it on and destroy your own house.

#26. Father John Misty – Mahashmashana

If you look closely, Papa John’s has slowly deconstructed his character. For years, the indie-folk god was making constant headlines with ridiculous and provocative statements, simply for his own amusement. But he’s been quite as of late, and this album might be an indicator. His sixth album (under this moniker) is probably his most “adult” one yet, though his music has always had an older-crowd appeal to it. He’s still making some wild swings lyrically, but generally he’s more honed in on ennui and personal troubles. He’s also stretched his songs out even further, with multiple 6+ minute epics here. Most of the songs are measured and seem to have a Highway 61 influence, of full-band folk that grabs an unchanging rhythm to match poetic meanderings. It’s also maybe his best album yet, and certainly features his best individual songs (check my favorite songs of 2024 post for more). Folksy, earnest and consistently catchy, this one has broad appeal. 

#25. The Bridge City Sinners – In The Age Of Doubt

Give a quick shoutout to water. A couple years ago I was at Riot Fest in Chicago when I took a break to refill my water at the sole water station on festival grounds. Right next door is the smallest stage, where the Bridge City Sinners were playing and readers, I was hooked immediately. Bands shouldn’t still be finding new ways to combine genres, but here we’ve got hardcore bluegrass. The band – and I was already a huge fan by the time the plane wheels touched back down in Boston – sings about heavenly bodies and beasts and mythical creatures, complete with occasional gnarly screaming, all done through acoustic Appalachian instruments. I imagine there’s other bands out there like this, and they’re not far removed from psychobilly, but I don’t know of anything in this alley. Their new album is as great as their previous ones. This is certainly one of the more niche entries on this list, but I will make it my mission to get them their widest audience.


This was really a struggle, some of these deserve a top 25 spot and would surely get it in a quieter year. I’m not even confident in my own list placement. But! Check back tomorrow for the finale, 25 absolutely enormous, unavoidable and truly wonderful records.

Since I can never help myself, here’s another five records I wanted to include: Folterkammer – Weibermacht (operatic black metal), The Smile – Wall of Eyes (Radiohead offshoot prog-indie), J. Mascis – What Do We Do Now (guitar indie from an all-time legend), Laura Jane Grace – Hole In My Head (punk from an all-time legend), Thee Oh Sees – SORCS 80 (a thought experiment where Jon Dwyer recorded garage rock with no guitars).

The Rundown: May 2024

Hello! How’s it going? How’s your year been? Over in the music world, it’s one of the best years I’ve ever seen. Comparable with 2016, if not even better. I wish I had known that would be the case when I decided to do flash reviews of every new album I listen to! I’m tired, folks. We’ve got a lot of great stuff this month, and a few weaker ones. These are not in any order whatsoever. There’s a lot of big names this post, but I hope you find some gems from this. Check out the third record here, in particular.


Shellac – To All Trains

Rest in peace Steve Albini. If you’re reading this, then you’re probably well-versed in Albini’s work already, but he was a god in the music scene. A talented musician who utterly despised the industry, most of his work was production. He produced records for anyone ranging from Nirvana to your shithead neighbor’s weird noise band – and never took a penny for his work. His last record as a musician came only days after his sudden passing, and it’s hauntingly beautiful. It’s also a pretty normal Shellac record; chunky and bass-heavy post-punk with snarled and often witty lyrics. The band was self-described as “minimalist,” I wouldn’t exactly use that term but these songs are all surprisingly easy. Most of them are perfectly digestible and just off-putting enough to drive away casual folks. Opener “WSOD” jams on a fun riff for a while. But the real ominous standout is closer “I Don’t Fear Hell,” where Albini sings about waiting to join all his friends down below. Classic Albini – dark, funny, groovy and eerily prescient. Albini was one of the best guys around but if he ended up in Hell, then brother, we’ll all see you there. 

Grade: 8/10   Initial release date: 5/17/24

Waxahatchee – Tigers Blood

I was saving, cherishing this one for the perfect day. Well it’s a sunny, warm Friday just before a long weekend and I’m in a good mood, finally time. My expectations were set pretty high, given that “Right Back To It” is my favorite song of the year and I don’t see anything else topping it. I’m also a lifelong Waxahatchee fan, although she’s not someone who I listen to often. The rest of the record isn’t 100% consistent, but it often hits. While the lead single is her most straight-up country song yet, the rest of the album is familiar indie-folk, with occasional bursts of guitar. These tunes are very sweet, very casual and just extremely well-developed. Katie’s voice is as good as always, but this album is more about summer-y vibes anyways. These are songs for aimless car rides with the windows down, songs for drinking a beer on the front lawn. And yet, I can tell this is a record I’ll come back to during all seasons. As expected, one of the best of the year. 

Grade: 8.5/10   Initial release date: 3/22/24

Salt Cathedral – Before It’s Gone

I heard one of the songs from this album on the radio many moons ago and kept a mental note to check back for an album. Finally, it’s here, and it’s glorious. There’s nothing particularly inventive happening here, yet it all feels original. I know little about this duo, but what they make is beautiful. This is atmospheric indie, almost gospel-like. There’s always rhythms, but some are fainter than others. Some exist only on a breeze and a vocal lick, others bring in hand drums and conventional pop songwriting. Add in some authentic and balanced lyrics, and you’ve got a multi-influenced gem of a record. This is pop music for people who don’t like pop music. Real winner!

Grade: 8/10   Initial release date: 3/22/24

Latrell James – Running In Place

If I had to pick a word to describe this album, it would be: vibrant. The local (Boston) rapper’s new album is quick and diverse, a bunch of short songs that range from muddied to sweet. Mostly, the album is very fun. Pristine production is a key factor here, making the brightest songs pop with effortless energy. No idea sticks around too long, making every song seem like a fleeting thought in a complicated mind. There’s some easy, brilliant stuff happening here. 

Grade: 8/10   Initial release date: 3/15/24

Middle Kids – Faith Crisis, Pt. 1

Middle Kids have never been the most exciting band, but they’ve always put out some great songs here and there. The band is mostly known for guitar indie-rock, a mix of 90’s throwback and current poppier indie. Their new album stays close to home, a group of pleasantly banging alternative tunes. The opening track “Petition” is a ripper, and the two real closing tracks (excusing an interlude) are great tunes on the ballad side of things. The entire middle of the album is made of fun but largely uninspired cuts, songs to enjoy once and forget immediately. This is kinda what they do, and they’ve carved out their own niche, but it doesn’t make for the most exciting listen.

Grade: 6.5/10   Initial release date: 2/16/24

Dua Lipa – Radical Optimism

I love Dua Lipa, but the public’s expectations were set too high for this one. Her first two albums proved that someone can still be entertaining and authentic within the confines of overproduced pop music; her third album falls victim to sterilization. Radical Optimism was promoted as more of an experimental, disco-influenced album, something that does not come through at all. Instead, it’s a collection of songs that are still very fun, but the blandest she’s sounded. This might be her best vocal work to date, and some songs on the front half have enough working for them to be replayable and memorable. But, a majority of these tunes are frustratingly rote. Dua Lipa has always been confident, an artist who is into herself and not making music because she’s a corporation – an idea taken too far, as these songs sound like they were made for an audience of one: Dua Lipa. The album is still a blast front-to-back, but after two of the best pop albums of the last decade, it’s a massive letdown. Listen once, digest it and forget it. 

A few days after I wrote the above paragraph, I was sitting in a dentist chair listening to dentist radio. “Houdini,” one of the singles off this album, played and it took three quarters of the song to realize what it was. A good note as to how disposable these songs really feel. 

Grade: 7/10   Initial release date: 5/3/24

Jlin – Akoma

Ok so I put this one on blind, thinking Jlin was more of a pseudo-R&B artist and not someone working more in glitch electronic. This is a whole world I know little about. Since I’m out of my wheelhouse, I can just say that I loved the bookend tracks here, especially a fun and rousing closer with an assist from Philip Glass (!). In between those was a set of avant-garde, lighter tracks that maybe didn’t do much for me but certainly weren’t unpleasant to listen to. I know just enough to understand that for the respective genre, this is a masterclass – strictly personally, it mostly went over my head.

Grade: 7.5/10  Initial release date: 3/22/24

Flo Milli – Fine Ho, Stay

I’m absolutely not qualified to be writing about artists like Flo Milli but hell I loved this. The songs are relatively rudimentary in nature but Flo Milli has an amazing, well, flow. Comically big boasts litter the rap tracks, and touches of tenderness hit the more R&B-inspired ones. But it’s mostly the former – this is a big, fun record. Don’t listen to it around your parents; this one is horny as all hell. SZA and Cardi B show up on a remix, almost predictably. They represent the best of a few solid assists throughout; enough to feel like a party, few enough that the focus is still on Flo Milli. If you like fun and carefree rap, add it to the list.

Grade: 7.5/10   Initial release date: 3/15/24

High On Fire – Cometh the Storm

As much as I’ve always been obsessed with Sleep, Matt Pike’s other, less-prolific-but-arguably-more-well-known metal band, High On Fire has never truly hit for me. Their ninth album is a pummeling burst of sludge metal, with nonstop guitar assault and Pike’s characteristic screamed vocals. More than ever, he sounds like he’s being tortured in the studio. With the exception of a mid-album lull, these songs offer no breaks at all, exhaustingly heavy from start to finish. They cast a wide rope, as this record really isn’t “sludge metal” and could pull in more standard heavy metal fans. The album’s big concern is bloat. The album starts with four songs over five minutes, which is not uncommon for a Pike band – my favorite song of his is the 13 minute “Sonic Titan.” But when the album itself is just shy of an hour, and nearly every song follows the same formula, it becomes too much. The album is too long-winded, although the back half is actually better than the front. Still, this is a hell of a metal record, and one that I could see myself going back to. 

Grade: 7.5/10   Initial release date: 4/19/24

Ride – Interplay

This one feels bad to write. Ride were always one of the loudest of the shoegaze bands, pushing guitar distortion to new levels. Even on their reunion albums prior, we’ve seen the band turn the amps up and crush out. But practically everything on their seventh album just sort of…exists. The songs are well-written but aimless, not really searching for that signature sound. It’s a shame, because I’ve been hearing “Portland Rocks” on the radio and have loved it – as it is a signature Ride song. And it’s not the only one on the album; “Stay Free” and “Essaouira” are vintage Ride. But a lot of these tracks just don’t really achieve much and don’t have much of anything to say. Some good foundations here, and a lot of missed opportunities.

Grade: 6.5/10   Initial release date: 3/29/24

Hurray For The Riff Raff – The Past Is Still Alive

The alt-country scene is alive and well. This album seems to have already gotten swept up in the wake of Waxahatchee’s similar and more prominent release, but it shouldn’t. Alynda Segarra has always known how to wear their heart on their sleeve, and this record is no different. I guess it’s “more of the same,” really, but when the same is this good, does it matter? These americana songs are soulful, breezy, earnest and twangy. Segarra is a natural when it comes to country-fied folk songs like this. While it won’t stand as the best record of this nature this year, it should turn some heads. Watch for local legend Anjimile pop up on the excellent “Ogallala”! 

Grade: 7.5/10   Initial release date: 2/23/24

Empress Of – For Your Consideration

2024 has been such an unprecedented year for music so far that plenty of “pretty good” albums are going to get completely lost in the shuffle. Unfortunately I think that’s true for the fourth Empress Of album, which already seems to be getting overlooked unfairly. The Honduran singer is back with more bedroom alternative-via-R&B smoothness. The album’s front half is very solid, with “Lorelei” and the Rina Sawayama-aided “Kiss Me” being the best of the best. These songs straddle the line between sultry and indie, an alt-pop barrier that’s eroding with each month. The album’s back half is more of the same, it doesn’t really stand up to the front half. The full picture is one that’s worth checking out if it’s your type of thing, but it isn’t going to change the world.

Grade: 7/10   Initial release date: 3/22/24

girl in red – I’M DOING IT AGAIN BABY!

I’ll admit that I went into this one with low expectations – girl in red’s debut album was a bold mix of indie and trap influences, but something about it really didn’t grab me personally. Obviously I was alone, as it immediately launched her into a stratosphere rarely seen by indie artists. Well I’m aboard now, because this sophomore album is a blast start to finish. These songs are abrupt, and mostly very energizing and manic. When they’re not, they’re sweet and earnest. It’s a mix of stuff more chaotic and varied than her debut, and all the better for it. At 27 minutes, the only real downside is that it could’ve used some more. A genuine surprise to me, and one of the best listens of the year so far.

Grade: 8/10   Initial release date: 4/12/24

Knocked Loose – You Won’t Go Before You’re Supposed To

Knocked Loose are one of those bands that I absolutely love but never know how to write about. The metal group doesn’t exist within the bounds of any specific subgenre, but they aren’t so radical as to define a new one, either. What they do is absolutely rip, and their third album rips even harder than their first two. They’re technically metalcore, a genre I usually don’t pay much attention to due to sheer repetition between bands. But Knocked Loose infuse it with elements of hardcore punk and death metal, emitting short and brutal transmissions that always make sure to be on the fun side of things. The songs on this album (especially the first half) don’t so much start and end as they do operate as one puzzling suite. There’s an assist from Poppy that should go down as one of the best guest verses of the year, too. This is absolute fire start to finish. EDIT: Since writing this, I’ve seen them live, and they absolutely smashed it. Premier live band, too.

Grade: 8/10   Initial release date: 5/10/24

Knoll – As Spoken

Look at the cover of this record – an ominous, black and white photo of a mirror, pointing diagonally away from the camera. It’s unsettling. I put this record on knowing it was metal, but not much more. This is powerful black metal. Abrasive, pounding, sounding like the depths of Hell. What I’m saying is, it’s extremely me music. I love raw black metal. Oddly, this album eschews one of the normal characteristics of black metal – lengthy songs. It’s a genre devoted to wearing you down through both repetition and ferocity, but the band does away with the former. Only four of the album’s eleven tracks are over five minutes, and the rest are all under four. Instead of repetition, the band gives you whiplash transitions. It’s just as effective. Great stuff.

Grade: 8/10   Initial release date: 1/26/24

Alluvial – Death Is But A Door

This is just a 4-track EP so I’ll keep this quick. This is proper death metal, grinding and brutal but still pretty fun. Three of the four songs didn’t truly leave an effect on me, even though I enjoyed them. But the song “Fogbelt” is rapidly becoming one of my favorite songs of the year. It’s got a nasty guitar riff in the chorus that sounds more nu-metal than anything; compliment, from my mouth. If nothing else, check that track out.

Grade: 7/10   Initial release date: 1/12/24

B3CCA4EVER – SMILEY FACE

This is an artist I’ve seen live. Last year, around my birthday, when B3CCA and her tag team partner Aaron Rourke took on The Miracle Generation for the IWTV Tag Team Titles in Beyond Wrestling. It’s one of the best matches I’ve ever seen in person. Since then, the wrestler has been focusing her efforts on music (check the penultimate track for a fellow grappler). It’s an EP of bubblegum pop, decently produced and not overlong. In classic kayfabe fashion, it’s not really clear if it’s a joke or not. B3CCA is a riot on social media, and there’s some tongue-in-cheek lyrics across this release – but some songs seem serious! It’s a fairly promising start, either way. It’s still real to me, dammit.

Grade: Meltzer gave this a 7.5/5   Initial release date: 5/3

Billie Eilish – Hit Me Hard And Soft

I really respect the boldness of this record. Eilish’s first two records both had distinct identities, and were wholly separate from each other. Her third seems to intentionally go against this idea, combining elements from her first two dichotomous albums and filtering in new ideas, too. The album opens with “Skinny,” a stripped down and powerful vocal ballad. The second track is “Lunch,” a synth-heavy tongue-in-cheek song that sounds ripped from her abrasive debut. This album is clearly one made by and for Eilish, and she throws everything at the wall. While some songs stay within familiar territory, others are unpredictable. After some time, we may agree that “L’Amour de Ma Vie” is her best song yet, a track that starts as a ballad and ends with wild club beats. While I don’t think this album quite stands up to her enigmatic debut album, it’s still a very solid pop release – and a refreshingly bold direction for a star at the top. 

Grade: 7.5/10   Initial release date: 5/17/24

Sum 41 – Heaven :x: Hell

Sum 41 was completely formative for me – All Killer No Filler was the first album I ever bought, and one I still know every word to. The band quickly moved beyond the immature pop-punk into other territories, but for their final album, they’ve devoted one-half to old habits. The first half of the two-disc record is old-school pop-punk, the musical equivalent of fitting perfectly into that suit/dress you wore to prom. It’s some of the best pop-punk stuff they’ve ever done, which is really saying something. Energetic, fun and raucous, it’s a reminder how powerful this band once was. 

In their later years, the band transitioned into metal. And as such that this is a double-album, it’s a double-review. The back half of this album is ten (well, nine) metal tracks that show the odd trajectory that the canucks have been on. Side B is fine, but it’s pretty middling compared to what came before it. The issue isn’t that the songs are bad, it’s that they have no place. Sum 41 carved out a unique and important niche in punk, something they never did successfully in metal. Metalheads rejected them for the pop-punk origins, and the songs weren’t unique enough to bring in old fans. These aren’t bad songs, but they don’t have much to do. It’s telling that the ten songs on this side include a short intro and a Stones cover (that sounds remarkably like the one done by The Unseen some 20 years ago). The back half is fun in comparison to the front, but it’s skippable. Still – as a whole, this is a wonderful sendoff for the band.

Grade: 7/10   Initial release date: 3/29/24


Sheesh! What a month. Lot of great releases this month, I don’t think this year can sustain this momentum. We need some garbage to even this out. Maybe I’ll find some for June. I can’t tell you fully what I’ll be listening between then and now, but you will see some British indie, some local dance-punk, and Charli XCX. Also, I am investing in strengthening my home security system, because I will finally be tackling Taylor Swift. Oh dear. Check back in July!