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Top 30 Albums of 2025

I don’t know what I’m doing here. 

I mean it. As attention spans decrease by the day and people move to audio or visual media consumption, I find myself writing more than I ever have for these lists (ok, I actually just checked and it’s only a page more than last year). I’d like to think there’s some noble cause behind it, that this is my way of combatting media illiteracy and the neverending onslaught of information that is the digital era. I’d also like to think I’m doing this because I believe in the power of writing and that you, dear reader, will find some album that moves you in the way that these albums move me. 

It could also just be a vanity project. 

It definitely might be a vanity project.  

Whatever the case, I’ve laid bare before you my annual list of albums that I enjoyed over the course of the year. They’re generally in ranked order, although I find that I tinker a lot with the placements, especially lower in the list. The top ten are heavily set in stone. 

While I do this mostly for myself and my own sanity, I really do appreciate you reading this and sharing your thoughts on these albums with me. The engagement I receive is fuel for the next year, and every little bit helps keep the fire going. Thank you for taking the time to actually read these reviews and react to them. It means more to me than you can know.

Honorable Mentions:

Carpe Diem, Captain Moonbeam Psychedelic Porn Crumpets (Garage Rock) Psych rock that’s too much fun to miss. 

Mercy Armand Hammer (Hip-hop) Another stellar project from billy woods and ELUCID. 

Private music Deftones (Metal) The Deftones release a Deftones album. 

Lotus Little Simz (Hip-hop) Little Simz processes trauma through a collection of relaxed, laidback beats. 

Cabin in the Sky De La Soul (Hip-hop) A solid old-school hip-hop album that pays homage to the ones we lost and the ones we’ll meet again.

30. In the Earth Again Chat Pile/Hayden Pedigo (Americana/Noise)

If you’ve been following these yearly updates over the past five years, you should be fairly familiar with the band Chat Pile. Their 2022 release God’s Country was a shocking, disgusting, blood splattered mess, tackling political and social issues with a deranged anger that was so shocking it teetered between serious and meme worthy (see grimace_smoking_weed.jpeg). Only a year after 2024’s Cool World, the band has returned to strike while the iron is hot. This time, they share the space with americana artist Hayden Pedigo, blending his simple, slowcore guitar work with their uncomfortable, nu-metal tinged riffs and haunted storytelling. 

Despite it being an album written in collaboration with another artist, this is hands down Chat Pile’s most vulnerable album. The content that singer Raygun Busch covers is devoid of his usual layered cynicism, opting instead for gutwrenching pieces about personal demons, feelings of despair, and lost friends (never thought I’d get teary-eyed because of a Chat Pile song, but I have “A Tear for Lucas” to thank for that). In the Earth Again is by no means a perfect album. It’s messy and at times it feels a little underbaked. But what lands this project on this list is the feeling that this project had to be made right in the moment when it was. There is an urgency to this project that I really respect. Its strength isn’t its polished nature, but rather it’s raw energy. 

For fans of… nights the setting sun never rises from.

29. Wayhome Kauan (Doom Metal)

There’s an old adage that I return to every year as the holidays approach, as my family and I prepare to travel to visit relatives and friends: “home is where the heart is.” It’s a cliche, but in many ways it rings true. Your home is where you are loved, where you place your love, and where you feel most yourself. As someone who has moved around a few times in his life, I know this to be true. I have often found myself in strange places where I have not felt home, but I have made my home through new friends, new loves, and new experiences. 

But in order to do this, one must unmake themselves in a way. One must find their way home, and one often finds they are no longer the same person they were when they left on this journey. Having moved from Russia to Finland in 2022, Anton and Alina Belov (Kauan’s main writers) undoubtedly found themselves in a similar position. This album lives in these liminal spaces, heavy at times, meditative at others. Meant to be consumed as one 50 minute song, this album evokes feelings of nostalgia, loss, grief, and acceptance, all within Kauan’s signature atmospheric doom metal. Should you choose to put on this album, do it in the quiet moments of your life. Put it on and watch the snow fall. Take a walk with your dog and find a quiet place to sit by a winter pond. You might find yourself lost, on a journey of your heart and mind. Be at peace. One day you too will find your way home. 

For fans of… Sigur Ros.

28. Getting Killed Geese (Art Rock)

This little band has come a long way since we last talked, dear reader. From getting heaps of buzz on the internet thanks to the brilliance of 3D Country and singer Cameron Winter’s solo album, to opening for King Gizzard during their multi-night residency at Red Rocks, these guys have absolutely blown up since I glowingly (and lovingly) compared their previous album to a drunken night at a dive bar. If you haven’t checked that review yet, go ahead and hop over to my “Best of 2023” list, and go to the number two spot. I’ll wait. 

You’re probably wondering what happened. Why is a band that I couldn’t shut the hell up about sitting so low on your list this year? The answer is simple, but it simultaneously comes across as an admonishment of this year’s release. No, this is not as good as 3D Country. But yes, it’s still really good. 

It took me a while to come around to this one. Songs like “100 Horses” and “Getting Killed” met me where I wanted them to, grooving with the same maniacal,  psychedelic energy that I’d come to expect from this band, while others like “Cobra” and “Husbands” fizzle without really lighting up. It’s a perplexing listen that doesn’t quite rise to the same heights as its predecessor, but it’s still really damn good. If this is a misstep in Geese’s career then, like this album, the highs will outweigh the lows. 

For fans of… David Bowie.

27. Dragon’s Blood Martin Grech (Atmospheric Rock)

I had a strange moment while listening to this album. I finished it one day while at work, put it to the side, decided that it wasn’t going to make my end of the year list, and then promptly kept listening to it. It infected my mind. I kept looking for clues to help me understand it, and found a bunch of instagram pictures with very little text. There was no roll out. No pomp and circumstance. The album wasn’t even available for purchase on Bandcamp. It was as if this album didn’t exist, or wasn’t meant to exist. It weighed on my mind. Clearly, it still does. 

In 2020, Martin Grech released Hush Mortal Core, one of my favorite progressive metal albums of the past decade. It was an album that was as grandiose as it was beautiful, and was complex and layered in a way that required multiple listens. Downloading this most recent album, I expected much of the same. 

I was incredibly let down. 

Dragon’s Blood is cold and sparse. It breathes and echoes, reverberating off the dark spaces where it was constructed. It’s moody and slow and missing many of the elements that made me love its predecessor. It feels like a confessional, each song a dark trip into the depths of Grech’s mind. Over cryptic, brilliantly poetic lyrics and minimalist instrumentation, Grech croons about the frailty of life, and the mystery of existence, leaving the listener with more questions than answers. 

And so I am deeply troubled. Although this isn’t the album I wanted, it’s a brilliant piece of art by an artist who refuses to be pinned down. The more I listen to it, the more I find myself immersed in Grech’s world. Please… make no mistake, this is a very dark world. I am often able to differentiate between artist and art, and yet this album leaves me feeling deeply concerned for this brilliant artist (if you listen to the lyrics of “The Pact,” you’ll understand why). This is art that has made me feel at the deepest level, but man is it really heavy.

For fans of… Sting.

26. Only Dust Remains Backxwash (Underground Hip-hop)

Man, Backwash only gets better with time. Her conversational flow and her excellent sampling and production have only grown since she popped onto my radar four years ago. Back then, she rapped about liberation through self-destruction, using industrial and metal samples to create a terrifying backdrop for her inner thoughts. On Only Dust Remains, it’s not that she seems to be in a better place, but rather she seems to be seeking a better place. Her rhymes and beats suggest that she still has her addictions, her destructive habits, her demons, but she also seems to want to fight them instead of immersing herself in them. She discusses therapy, trauma, the cycles of addiction and despair from a place of someone who has growing stronger through her struggles. Even the samples have switched from the more metal infused ones from her past to ones infused with elements of electronic music, gospel, and art rock. 

This is music for those who struggle with mental health, for those longing to be heard. This is music for those who seek better days but also know what it’s like to long for the darkness. Let this album hear you, help you, heal you. I promise, it will. 

For fans of… $uicideBoy$

25. Pain to Power Maruja (Post Punk)

Imagine this for a second: You live in a country where a man rose to power using the division of and demonization of people in order to maintain systems of control. This man openly lied, despised the people he claimed to represent, and destroyed the perception of his country on the global stage. Imagine, if you will, that this man was finally outed from power DESPITE ATTEMPTING A COUP, and the world and country slowly began to heal. 

Then, imagine that this man was elected back into power.  

That’s the fury that Maruja channels in their latest album. While not American, their album addresses many of the issues that our country faces, specifically the way the rich use political and social issues to divide the lower classes. Maruja don’t pull their punches, using a blend of post rock, hardcore, and post punk to craft a frantic and chaotic soundscape. This album perfectly encapsulates the anxieties induced by the echo chambers we live in and the financial systems that oppress us. Maruja offers us an answer, turning each song into a rallying cry for us to embrace each other, to choose love over hatred, and to fight against corruption and the systems that trample the people that live in them. 

For fans of… Rage Against the Machine.

24. Amen Igorrr (Avant Garde/ Baroque Metal)

Look, it’s really hard for me to not like Igorrr. They’re a band that uses their incredible talents to lean into the absurd. They take their music so seriously that they’re not afraid not to take it seriously (if that makes any sense). They lean heavily into experimentation (there is a video out there of all the different sounds that mastermind Gautier Serre uses to create his music including a vacuum and a cookie tin), and as their popularity grows, they are only afforded more resources with which to do so.

Amen is not a completely different experience than the group’s previous ones. You’re still going to get your yearly dosage of baroque music infused with thrash, metalcore, and industrial. You’re still going to get breakdowns led by absurd instruments like recorders (“Mustard Mucous”). You’re still going to get unintelligible screams accompanied by lush, operatic vocals. But you’re also going to get a product that feels more refined than some of his previous efforts. For better or for worse, this feels like Igorrr’s most… mature (?) work to date. There’s more atmosphere and space, especially on the back half of the album, which gives some of the weirder moments more space to shine.

If you’re trying to “get” this music, don’t be afraid to laugh. Don’t be afraid to be in awe of the sheer magnitude of how ridiculous it is. Don’t be afraid to have fun. There’s a lot of serious music on this list, but this isn’t it. This is an album for people who don’t mind music made by literal chickens. This is an album for people who wish Leslie Nielsen interviews had more fart machine jokes in them. 

For fans of… Youtube Poops.  

23. Let God Sort Em Out Clipse (Hip-hop)

I think the strength of Clipse’s latest project is how effortless they make being great sound. At a glance, this album is a strong collection of beats and rhymes. It’s easy to put this on and let it rattle the trunk. But the true genius of this album is the elements that exist just beyond the surface. Pusha T and Malice are in peak form here, rapping about fame, money, faith, and power with a sneer and an air of devil-may-care. They tapdance through bar after bar of intricate wordplay, layering double-entendres on top of each other like they’re tiramisu while Pharrell’s beats have enough punch to send the Logan brothers to their maker for an eternity. They invite some of the biggest names in the game (Tyler, the Creator, Kendrick, Nas) to go toe-to-toe with them in the arena and still come out on top. This isn’t an album so much as it is a masterclass in what makes hip-hop such a great genre.

If you’re looking for hip-hop that bangs and swaggers, this is for you. This is a comeback album that reminds the young bucks in the game that the ones who hold the crown aren’t necessarily the ones doing something “new,” but the ones doing hip-hop well. 

For fans of… Biggie Smalls.

22. Pirouette Model/Actriz (Post Punk)

Damn, this album is sexy. It’s sweaty and intoxicating. It pulsates with a dark, edgy energy that one would come to expect from a night in a big city club. It whispers in your ear and draws you into the darkened corners of your mind to grind on you, to caress you, to take you away from reality even if only for an hour. It’s one that imprints itself on your mind, so that when you awaken the next morning, bleary-eyed and stumbling through the world with a blinding headache, you can’t shake the memory of it.

And yet, despite all this sexual, driving energy, the thing that makes this album so incredible is its storytelling. Buried within the onslaught of industrial and noise inspired dance beats are stories about desire, self-awakening, and liberation. Each one feels as intimate as the album itself, something shared with you personally ala vocalist Cole Haden’s delicate croon. It’s an album that is refined as it is raw, as diary-esq as it is universal. It’s one that will turn any room into a darkened rave where one is welcomed to explore themselves, their lovers, those closest with reckless abandon.   

For fans of… Duran Duran

21. A Welcome to Weakness Runnner (Indie Rock)

I’ve always appreciated, in some horrible way, the beauty that comes from collapse. There’s something about humanity that emerges when things fall apart, be it the projection that comes from ourselves as we observe it, or the experience we have when it occurs close to us. A car that continues to work even as its parts fail. A sweater with holes in it. An abandoned schoolhouse from the early 1900’s. There’s something about each of these things that provides space for reflection and recognition, which in many ways is the core of what makes us human. 

This is the epicenter of Runnner’s latest album. On the precipice of a tour for his last album, the beautiful Like Dying Stars, We’re Reaching Out, Noah Weinman tore his achilles tendon during a game of basketball. Bedridden and disappointed with the cancellation of his tour, Weinman found himself grappling with the relationship that had fallen apart prior to all of these changes. The result is a collection of indie rock songs about loss and pain that comes with collapse. It’s about taking in the things that broke you and finding the beauty in them: the doldrums of recovery, the quiet of an empty apartment, the opportunity to make yourself something new when the dust has settled. 

For fans of… Snow Patrol. 

20. From Nothing Benthos (Progressive Metalcore)

A decade and change ago, metalcore was at its height (I need you to envision that, after typing that sentence, I paused and sighed. Where does time go?). Labels like Sumerian were churning out acts like Periphery, Veil of Maya, and Monuments, and it seemed like every new act was some bastardized version of the next until, like every trend, the saturation of the market smothered the movement and created a collapse of sorts. It certainly bred a musical cynicism within me. Why would I listen to this new album when I have Juggernaut or Amanuensis at home? 

All this is to say, you really have to impress me if you’re going to drop a metalcore album. Sure, the trends in the genre have shifted, focusing more on a Sleep Token and Deftones-esq sound, but I’m getting old and if I’ve heard it done once, I don’t need to hear it done again (the thirty-four year old said, shaking his fist at the sky). Enter Benthos, a progressive metal band from Italy that combines Dillinger Escape Plan zany-ness (“Fossil”, “Athletic Worms”) with massively catchy moments akin to Leprous (“Let Me Plunge”). In the year where we lost Destrage, one of metal’s wildest acts, Benthos stepped in as one of metal’s more exciting new bands. If their future output is anything like this album, I wouldn’t be surprised to see them on the global stage sooner rather than later.  

For fans of… The Contortionist.

19. Achilles Kevin Atwater (Indie Rock)

Two years ago, Kevin Atwater released Downer’s Grove, an EP that felt like an artist actually taking the reins of their art and making a cohesive, mature statement. It left my hungry to see what he might accomplish on his next, full length release (the purpose of any good EP). Well, two years later we find ourselves at his first full album release, and it’s everything I hoped Atwater would achieve.

What I love about this project is the juxtaposition of love and violence throughout it. Yes, I recognize that’s not healthy, but the imagery is truly incredible. The two are heartbreakingly interchangeable in Atwater’s stories, where toxic relationships and nights of passion are always sprinkled with tinges of blood. These are articulated through his signature, abraded storytelling, a factor that has always driven his projects, and it listens not just like an indie rock album, but a collection of personal stories that reveal truths about Atwater and what has comprised his past year. The production also steps ahead of where it was previously. If my complaint with his last project was that there were a few moments where Atwater shifted moods or styles too jarringly, they’ve been completely adjusted on this. Achilles is a statement of maturity, an artist fine-tuning their voice to create an indie rock album that is as enjoyable and catchy as it is touching and poignant. 

For fans of… Iron and Wine.  

18. Mayhem Lady Gaga (Pop)

It will come as no surprise to anyone who reads these lists that I’m not really a pop listener. While there are probably many ways we could interpret why I don’t spend much of my time listening to the genre, I bring this up not to start a psychoanalysis of my music identity but rather to lead into the idea that, if you see a pop album on my list, it’s because I think it’s really damn good. 

With this particular album, I’m sure it’s indicative of my age. My students certainly let me know how “old” I was to have Lady Gaga on my list. That being said, there are three ways aging pop stars can go. They can either continue to shit out the same embarrassing pop they’ve always made without any innovation or experimentation or can try to pathetically pander to the modern trends of the genre. OR, they can make an artistic statement that is representative of who they are as an artist and where they are at this current point in their career. I’m sure it’s very clear where this Lady Gaga album falls. 

Mayhem is a gallery walk through Gaga’s era, a statement on her career and where she’s come from, while simultaneously allowing for experimentation into styles that have inspired her over the years (Gaga is nothing if not a chameleon). There are bangers (“Disease”, “Abracadabra”) that are reminiscent of her early domination of the 10’s club scene, as well as strange, artsy songs (“Killah”, “Zombieboy”) that put on full display her love for Prince, Bowie, and the Talking Heads. Gaga commands the attention of the listener throughout this entire project, and the result is a collection of earworms that will get you up and dancing like it’s 2011.

For fans of… Lady Gaga… duh? 

17. Goyard Ibn Said Ghais Guevara (Hip-hop)

This album is nothing but ambitious. It’s apparent in the use of a Russian symphony sample in the opening track (“The Old Guard is Dead” the hip-hop track of the year, holy shit). It’s apparent in the heady nature of the album’s title, and its relation to Guevara’s experience in the music industry. It’s obvious in the choice of album artwork. Everything screams “this is a young man who is not only incredibly talented, he’s incredibly intelligent, artistically literate, and calculated.” This isn’t the type of album someone makes for a debut. This is an album that many young artists make years into their careers. 

Using an art show as a metaphor for his feelings of being in the music industry, Guevara touches on fame and the struggles that black artists endure within a music industry dictated by white people in power, white fans (yes, me), and people who aren’t seeking deeper music. 

The strength of this album comes not only from the beats, of which the first half of the album are dominated by trap style beats while the second leans into moodier, stranger waters, but from Guevara’s intricate lyricism. While this is something you could put on at a party, the reason you should listen to it is because of what he’s saying, not just how it sounds.  

If you aren’t convinced to listen to it yet, know that Kendrick used one of the tracks as the song that introduced him at the Super Bowl. At 25, this kid is only on the way up. I’m truly excited to hear what he comes up with next. 

For fans of… Dead Prez. 

16. Cinder Lux Terminus (Instrumental Progressive Metal)

When I was trying to explain to my students the different types of metal (in an attempt to get them practicing description skills), I put a song from this album on next to a more “traditional” sounding metal song. One of my student’s responses was “were you just aura farming when you listened to this?” Another asked “did this just give you main character energy?” It elicited a chuckle from the class, but I think it painted an accurate picture in my mind of what it sounds like to listen to this album. 

Lux Terminus crafts a very specific type of cinematic, progressive metal.  Each song feels like climbing a mountain, watching the sunrise bathe the land in a watercolor of warm colors. Songs like “Jupiter II: To Bend a Comet” feel like the end of a movie where, right before the credits roll, the main character demonstrates some feat of power or discovers some powerful inner truth. Some songs soar with sweeping, epic moments (“Catalyst”) while others groove and bounce with tinges of Weather Report jazz fusion (“P.L.O.N.K.”). There’s a joy and wonder imbued into each track that makes this album feel like an uplifting flight into the sky. This is an album that transforms every run down the ski slope into a desperate race against time, every walk to the grocery store as a quest to discover an ancient treasure, every dinner a mixing of dangerous chemicals that could save or destroy the world. 

 Using sonic palettes that are as modern as they are an homage to soundtracks from the 80’s, Vikram A. Shankar (keyboards), Brian Craft (bass), and Matthew Kerschner (drums) have created an album that feels both fresh and comfortingly nostalgic. If you’re looking for music as complex as Dream Theater, and as grandiose as Symphony X, this is the act for you.  

For fans of… final boss fights.

15. Black Hole Supretta Aesop Rock  (Underground Hip-hop)

This man literally cannot be stopped. Since 2020 he has released five albums, each as massive and dense as one might come to expect from the man who, in 2019, was crowned as the hip-hop artist with the highest number of unique words used in their lyrics. There isn’t too much I can say that I haven’t already said over the past few years. It’s funny, the write-up for the man with the highest word count might be one of the shortest on this list. 

The reality is if you don’t like Aesop Rock, and you’ve been reading my lists over the past six years or have been in the hip-hop scene, there’s nothing that this album is going to convince you that you’re wrong. Aesop has his style. He has his beats. He doesn’t give a shit if you like him. He hasn’t been on tour since 2017. He doesn’t need your patronage. Aesop does this for the craft and, quite frankly, he’s one of the most legit people to ever do it. He doesn’t need to convince you he’s one of the best artists to ever do it. He just is. 

For fans of… Del the Funkee Homosapien.

14. Soft Spot Honningbarna (Hardcore)

Man, I tried, I really did. I tried to challenge myself to sit still while I listened to this album and wrote this review but, dear reader, it was an impossible feat. Within seconds of the opening track “Schafer” I found myself banging my head and grooving to the music. It’s that infectious. You can’t fault me. Soft Spot is a raucous, pulse pounding, 39 minute assault of pure energy that charges through hardcore riffs, post punk grooves, and driving dance hall beats. This is one of those acts that I would love to see live, as each song is sure to get the crowd moving. It doesn’t matter that you probably don’t know what they’re saying. You’ll find yourself pumping your fist and screaming along just the same. 

 For fans of… Turnstile.

13. Fuck U Skrillex You THINK UR ANDY WARHOL BUT UR NOT!! Skrillex (EDM)

For the past couple years, Skrillex has been quietly attempting to reinvent himself as an artist. Two years ago he dropped Quest for Fire, an experimental and unique attempt to tackle different types of electronic music and Don’t Get Too Close, a slew of attempts to breach the top of the charts. It’s a noble endeavor, as Skrillex came into the international spotlight as one of the forerunners of the dubstep movement creating music so ridiculous it quickly became a meme. Especially as electronic music has sort of moved on from the sounds of the 2010’s, the task seems like one that most electronic artists inevitably face. Well here we are, fifteen years later, and Skrillex did something that I certainly wasn’t expecting. He dropped his latest album on April Fools Day and it is unironically one of the best things he’s ever done. 

Fuck You… plays less like an album and more like a live set, seeing Skrillex bang his way through forty-six minutes of different genres and styles. Yes, there is still plenty of dubstep on this album (“SPITFIRE” through “ANDY” leans pretty heavily into it) but there’s also enough variety in this to demonstrate how skilled of a dj Skrillex really is (the DnB ending of this is fire). This project isn’t some mature statement like Quest for Fire, but it essentially serves the same purpose. So do what I did and put this on as your getting ready for your ski day. I guarantee you’ll find your zen. 

For fans of… UFK Dubstep… the good ol’ days.

12. World Maker Psychonaut (Sludge Metal)

Fatherhood has been one of the single greatest things to happen to me. It has taught me more about this world than I ever thought I could know. It has taught me more about myself than I ever thought possible. The beauty of seeing my daughter grow and learn and become because of who my wife and I are is so breathtakingly powerful that sometimes I just find myself staring at my daughter and feeling a swell of emotions. If there is power in taking life, there is far more power and beauty in making it. 

That is the focus of Psychonaut’s third album. Upon finding out he was going to be a father, vocalist and lyricist Stefan De Graef composed this album as a message to his son, articulating all his hopes, worries, and emotions leading up to his birth. If that name sounds familiar to you, it’s because De Graef is also the vocalist for Hippotraktor, one of the acts to completely surprise me with where it landed on my list. While the rhythm section is impressive in this band, it’s De Graef who once again steals the show with his vocal performance. He is quickly rising as one of my favorite vocalists in the metal scene, gently crooning one moment before wielding some of metal’s most monstrous harsh vocals. What makes his performance even more spectacular is that he does it all while performing some of the most impressive fretwork of the year. 

If you still aren’t sold on this album, hit the trilogy of songs (“You Are the Sky…”, “…Everything Else is Just the Weather”, “And You Came With Searing Light”) that literally made me stop grading and sit in awed silence. They are, in my opinion, the defining moment of this album and a clear indication of how epic this project is. This is the kind of powerful art I hope to create for my daughters one day, a monument to my neverending love for them. This is the kind of project that defines what it means to be human, to experience, to create. Be in awe of this album. The world doesn’t make us. We make it.  

For fans of… Mastodon

11. Willoughby Tucker, I’ll Always Love You Ethel Cain (Gothic, Folk)

There’s something different… more powerful about summer love. Everything feels more real. It’s hotter. It’s more urgent. It’s more romantic. It lingers in the shadow of fate and the realization that, when the summer ends, so too will this doomed love. There’s power in that, and it’s in these hazy, sepia tones that Ethel Cain’s latest project lingers. 

I often find myself completely lost in the atmosphere of this album. Sure, there is a track or two that would find themselves cozied up with anything you might hear on the radio nowadays (“Fuck Me Eyes”), but the true power of this album is in the spaces where it breathes. Tracks like “Tempest” and “Nettles” feel like they belong on a post rock album instead of one of an artist whose previous work might have been comparable to that of Lana Del Ray. They meditate on mantras of love lost, desire, and the promises that come in between the kisses we steal under the setting summer sun. Some listeners who prefer listening to individual songs over entire albums might find this to be a bit of a turn-off, but for those seeking an actual album experience, the result is a product that grips from start to finish and leaves the listener drenched in a feeling of melancholy and bittersweet nostalgia. 

So listen to this one as the sun goes down. Hold your love a little tighter. Feel the fleeting nature of this experience and love it entirely, despite the fact that, in the end, it’s all doomed to end. 

For fans of… Sarah McLachlan.

10. “GOLLIWOG” Billy Woods (Underground Hip-hop)

There has always been an element of horror and anxiety woven in Billy Woods’ artistry. His dense, multilayered storytelling exudes a sense of unease, like he needs to speak lest he be silenced. The man blurs his face during photoshoots and interviews. His works often focus on the modern and ancestral horror of the black American experience. It only makes sense that, on his latest album, he fully embraces these elements. 

The horror is multifaceted in this project, manifesting itself in the beats constructed by a slew of big name producers (El-P, Kenny Segal, The Alchemist to name a few) and in Wood’s stories about systemic violence and what it means to be black in America. Songs like “Jumpscare” and “Waterproof Mascara” expertly use sampling and production techniques to create a terrifying, unsettling soundscape for Woods to explore these topics, while other producers opt for darker but more straightforward trap beats to punctuate Wood’s poetry. While the list of producers and features on this might make the album come across as a smattering of too many cooks in the kitchen, it affords each song a unique sound that deftly connects back to Wood’s overarching themes and message, something that I’ve felt is lacking on some of Wood’s single producer projects. 

At this point, there’s no question that Woods is one of the best hip-hop artists of our generation. His densely packed style isn’t for everyone, but his attention to artistry and craft are truly awe inspiring. He’s slowly become one of the most prolific artists out there, releasing at least one project a year over the past half decade, whether it’s through a solo project or one of his numerous groups. And while not all his projects resonate with me, this one has haunted my thoughts since I first listened to it. If you let it in, don’t be surprised if you wake in the middle of the night in a cold sweat, the presence of this album lingering in the corner of your room. 

For fans of… The Roots.

9. The Overview Steven Wilson (Progressive Rock)

Steven Wilson is a strange artist for me to articulate my feelings about. I won’t mince my words… I think he’s one of the greatest progressive rock artists of all time. His work with Porcupine Tree, Blackfield, and his solo work pre-2020 is enough to demonstrate that. And then, something happened and he forgot how to write a song. I didn’t need Wilson to ascribe to your classic progressive rock tropes. Lord knows he took 80’s pop and made it his own on 2017’s To the Bone. But then Wilson lost his spark. And so, for the past five years, I have waited with baited breath for a Steven Wilson album to move me in the ways that The Raven that Refused to Sing and Hand. Cannot. Erase. Did. 

Or, at the very least, I waited for an album that didn’t disappoint the hell out of me. 

I have no interest in going to space. As someone who suffers from pretty severe claustrophobia, the thought of launching myself into the abyss with only a thin wall between me and oblivion doesn’t sound super fun (I have frequently told people that, should an asteroid come hurtling towards our planet and our government finds a way to get everyone off in time, I will still opt for destruction over a life floating through space). That being said, there are many who have ventured up into the great beyond and have come to experience something called “The Overview Effect.” It is an emotional and philosophical shift in thinking, a realization that there are no borders and that we as humans are more interconnected than we are different. It’s a beautiful sentiment, and one that all world leaders should be required to experience. It is in this concept that Wilson roots his latest album and, as you can tell from my placement of it on my list, he does so with great success. 

The album is two songs, each about twenty minutes and change, that explores the aforementioned concept. While this might sound daunting, each song is brilliantly crafted in a way that gives them space to breathe while keeping them interesting. Wilson’s love for 70’s rock is on full display on this album, filled with incredibly memorable motifs that shift and swirl in and out of focus. The even bigger achievement is that neither song loses steam (the second half of “The Overview” is awe inspiring). As the length would insinuate, these songs require multiple listens, but each one is more fulfilling than the last. 

While only time will tell where and how Wilson’s legacy will end, this album is a reminder to fans that he can still craft a well-constructed album that pays homage to the acts that have come before him, while also possessing the qualities that make his music uniquely his. If this is any indication of where he is creatively, I have no doubt the back half of the 2020’s are going to see him producing some of his best music yet. 

For fans of… Pink Floyd.

8. Dead Channel Sky clipping. (Industrial/ Experimental Hip-hop)

If you want to understand this group, stop reading now and go watch their NPR Tiny Desk concert. It’s 24 minutes long, which is not a huge time commitment, but in that span you will grasp just how incredible this group is. It certainly might articulate it to you better than I’m about to. 

It’s easy to label clipping. As the “Daveed Diggs project” and move on. Those with a pulse on Broadway for the past decade will certainly remember him as the tour-de-force who voiced Lafayette/Thomas Jefferson in the smash hit show Hamilton. It would also give you an idea of the level of talent we’re dealing with here with this group. It would also, perhaps, inadvertently diminish the importance of producers Jonathan Snipes and William Hutson, who mastermind the beats on every clipping. album like they’re creating a rube goldberg machine. What the three of them create when their forces combine is a hip-hop project unlike anything you’ve ever heard, a compilation of skittering, anxiety-inducing songs that at times feel less like songs and more like feelings. 

Ditching the straight up horror aesthetic of their last two albums, clipping. Have created a new type of terror, one rooted in our digital world. Songs about losing your touch on reality, addiction to technology, and rebellion through online engagement are scattered across this album, each one hacking into your subconscious, slowly corrupting you with a sense of unease. Over glitching, sharp, electronic beats, Diggs demonstrates his versatility as an artists, at times portraying a sarcastic, bleak version of the future through his conversational if slightly monotone delivery, while at other times developing a sense of frantic urgency through his breakneck rapping. The effect is an album that, like a virus, corrupts your thoughts long after its over, replaying the hooks over and over in your mind like a pop-up advertisement. 

If you previously found clipping. to be hard to get into, this is definitely them at their most accessible. That isn’t to say there aren’t challenging moments on this album (the interludes are … difficult to digest at times), but one definitely leans into their EDM influences more. Who knows, you just might find yourself dancing to the apocalypse. 

For fans of… Nine Inch Nails.

7. Reptilian Brain Alpha Male Tea Party (Math Rock)

If you want my thoughts, here’s the link to the review I wrote a few months ago on this album: https://kevinjasica.com/2025/11/12/reptilian-brain/ 

Ok, I’m half kidding. If you haven’t read my review on this album from late last year, you should. It opens up a nice conversation on the album as a whole and what makes it such a strong rock album, while providing some really great context on the conversation surrounding it. If you don’t have time to dig into that, I don’t blame you. In the year of 2026, the fact that you’re even reading these reviews is kind of a miracle. So, I’ll respect your time and condense my previous thoughts while redirecting the conversation towards why this album earned such a high spot on my list. 

There’s a lot of rock music that dropped this year, but not much of it feels as authentic, as unique, as urgent as AMTP’s latest LP. This band has found a way to meld pop sensibility with jerky rhythmic changes and thundering riffs. It’s like Smashing Pumpkins and At the Drive-In had a love child. Yeah, it rocks that hard, and there’s enough variety to appease listeners from all walks of life. 

As I mentioned in my review, the heart of this album is the emotion that comes from the addition of vocals. While this band write riffs that are massive enough to sing-a-long to, it’s the storytelling, the NEED to have vocals to do so, that makes this album so powerful. Don’t believe me? I’ll return once more to “A Terrible Day to Have Eyes” the song shared below this post. Capturing a particularly traumatic moment in vocalist Tom Peters’ life. In one piece, the band capture such a human experience, one that every listener can relate to. At some point we have seen something so horrific (the death of a loved one, a scenario where we should have stood up for what was right, a loss of innocence) that we were forever transformed afterward. That message, in a way, is the core of this album. When we see such moments, do we choose to look away, do we stand and stare, or do we act while we still can?

In a time where it’s easy to be passive, this album musically, lyrically, and emotionally is anything but. 

For fans of… Thrice. 

6. Magic, Alive! McKinley Dixon (Hip-hop)

There’s a lot of music that’s really heavy on this list. Especially as we approach the top of this list, I think many of my listeners will think, “damn dude, are you ok?” My answer is “yes,” but I also think a lot of “powerful” music that resonates with me resides in really heavy aspects of the human experience. But one can’t only reside in the heavy aspects of life. One must find the joy. The joy is where, from the ashes, we must return. 

That is essentially where McKinley Dixon’s latest project resides. Magic, Alive! is a concept album about a group of young men who experience the tragic loss of a friend and, in their grief, discover that the way to keep our loved ones alive is through celebration, music, creation, and art. This album takes this really heavy concept and twists it into a celebration of hip-hop music and black culture in a way that… I’m about to make a really bold statement… hasn’t been done since Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly.

Yeah, that’s how good this is. 

Using live performances of local Chicago musicians as the backdrop for his rhymes, Dixon constructs an jazz rap album that is as light as it is thought provoking, as sorrowful as it is joyful, as playful as it is pressing. The energy on this project is truly the driving force, and it feels like a warm summer day in the city, catching an artist busking on the corner of the block, people dancing in the street. It’s warm and bright, and engages the listener from the soothing, scene setting intro track “Watch My Hands” to the pensive, shimmering conclusion “Could’ve Been Different.” The wisdom that Dixon pours across these tracks fills the soul with a sense of purpose, and it’s one that I can see myself returning to as it ages over the years as a reminder to stand up for what is right as well as appreciate the moments I have with my loved ones. 

On a side note, I can’t emphasize how much the song “Run. Run. Run Pt. 2” caught me off guard. Let me be clear: I am an outsider when it comes to hip-hop music. I appreciate it, and some of my favorite albums are hip-hop albums, but the experiences I’ve had are very different from many of those who are staples of the genre. It’s not made for me. That being said, I was legitimately moved by the sequel to a track from Dixon’s previous album. If “Run. Run. Run” is a song about police violence and the shooting of young black men, “Run. Run. Run. Pt. 2” is the storm that comes after, the protests, the riots, the civil rights movements. There’s a moment where the trombones kick in halfway through the song that always causes a lump in my throat because you can feel the emotion in Dixon’s music. This project isn’t just for him. It’s for everyone who has lost a brother, sister, mother, father, cousin, and friend to injustice and systemic violence. So on top of everything else, this album is a reminder to keep fighting for what is right, to keep celebrating the ones lost, to find the magic that can bring the dead back to life. 

For fans of… Kendrick Lamar and J. Cole.   

5. LSD Cardiacs (Progressive Punk)

If I had to label one artist as my “Artist of the Year,” an act that I haven’t been able to shut up about, it would be the Cardiacs. For the past thirty four years of my life I have somehow avoided hearing any of the music from what I now consider to be one of the most important progressive acts of all time. Yeah, I’m making a lot of bold claims in this intro paragraph, but I genuinely mean them. It’s been years since I’ve come across a music group that has had such a profound impact on me. After listening to this album, I felt compelled to dive back into their discography, to consume every album I could by them, something I haven’t been driven to do since… Steven Wilson back when I discovered him around 2014. 

To understand the exigence surrounding this album, one must dip at least a toe into the mythology surrounding its release. The Cardiacs have been around since the 80s, releasing music possessed by the manic energy of a carnival, the complexities of progressive rock, and the devil-may-care, tongue in cheek attitude of British punk. In 2007, they began work on this album, when the work was tossed to the side after frontman and mastermind, Tim Smith, suffered a heart attack and stroke, and developed dystonia (a neurological disorder impacting movement and speech). 

It’s at this point that I could continue to go into the specific history of events that led up to this album, but there are plenty of other publications that do this (the liner notes of the CD are a tome recounting the exact recording and producing of all these songs) and you’ve come here to hear about why you should listen to it. So I’ll spare you the details and just say that while he was rehabilitating, Smith, with the help of guitarist Kauvis Torabi, sibling Jim, and a slew of former band mates, began using the notes, his demos, and Smith’s own verbalized ideas to record the album that sits in front of you. With Smith at the helm (as much as his disease would allow him), the collective recorded parts in a wild attempt to cover Smith’s densely complex playing style, unique melodic lines, and wildly cryptic lyrics (the crazy/heartwarming thing is that they pulled it off). This story has a bittersweet ending. In 2020, Tim Smith died, leaving behind a legacy any human would be proud to have, and a collection of half-finished songs. It is over the next five years that these songs would be finished using his notes, his friends, and their undying love for him and his music. 

LSD is to avant garde, progressive punk what Blackstar was to art rock. It’s a zany celebration of life, an epic meditation on death, a middle finger to the way life eventually cripples us all. This album, oddly enough, is a great starting point for understanding the band because it has a little bit of every album on it. There are symphonic and epic flourishes, a la “Men in Bed,” “Busty Beez,” and “Pet Fezant.” There’s manic punk rock energy on rippers like “Woodeneye,” “Lovely Eyes,” and “Downup.” There are fist pumping rock anthems like “By Numbers” and “Ditzy Scene.” All of these different songs are played in a way wholly unique to Smith’s unique writing style and sound, which is made all the more impressive by the fact that Smith was not able to sing or play on the album. It’s hard for me to truly describe this album because it sounds entirely unique. If you haven’t heard a Cardiacs album, you have no idea what you’re in for, but I can promise you that it will be an experience you won’t forget. 

That is my selling point to you. Very rarely do I get this excited about artists. Sure, I have artists that I love and artists that blow my mind in a given calendar year, but it’s been a long time since I’ve found myself raving about a group in this way. This is the group that inspired so many of my favorite musical groups, from Mr. Bungle to The Dillinger Escape Plan. For godsakes, they were going to have Devin Townsend produce this album but there was a scheduling conflict. Yes, there are other albums that are ranked higher on this list, but none of them shifted my literal taste in music in this way. If you are  looking for an album that will surprise you and touch you, this is the one for you. Who knows, you might find yourself joining me on my musical journey to love even more Cardiacs over the next year. 

For fans of… music expressed in a way you’ve never heard done before. 

4. Pachinko Moron Police (Progressive Rock)

Scrolling through this list, it’s pretty apparent that loss is a powerful human emotion that inspires some of the greatest music ever put to wax. It causes us to reflect. It forces us to change. It challenges our perception of self. It’s in this space that Moron Police found themselves following the death of their drummer and childhood friend, Thore Omland Petterson.

Their previous album, 2019’s A Boat on the Sea, was a goofy collection of socially conscious songs about false kings and the meaning of life that sounded like a mix between your favorite musicals and anime theme songs. In many ways, it was a test drive for all the qualities that make this album so damn strong. Because while A Boat… was a collection of songs with similar production and thematic material, this is a full-blown balls to the wall concept album. Themes are introduced in early songs only to be revisited, reshaped, and strengthened as the album progresses. Songs twist and turn with reckless abandon. It is truly a masterclass in modern progressive rock, and I say that as someone who has listened to hundreds of progressive rock albums over the decades. This is a band recognizing its final form, and it is truly awe-inspiring to reach the end of this album, tears in your eyes, and realize: “Holy shit, they actually pulled this off.”

That’s right, I had literal tears in my eyes. I’m someone who is easily moved by music, but this is an album that achieves this on so many fronts. For starters, the sheer scope of this project and the final realization of all those efforts is truly beautiful to behold. I love a good underdog story, and seeing a band reach their full potential never fails to move me. 

But more importantly, it is the musical-esq concept album at the core of this project that breaks my heart and rebuilds it over the course of its hour run time. Inspired by their dear friend’s passing, they wrote an album in which a man dies, is given an afterlife in the form of a pachinko machine, and is… and I’m just speculating here because they haven’t released an official story… attached to a nuke and launched into space to blow up God. Yeah, it sounds ridiculous on paper, but it’s the heart of the story that hits so damn hard. It touches on fears of death, and how in order to lessen that fear we must find the beauty in all human experiences. It touches on capitalism, for it is the character’s greed that is twisted into a sick punishment, turning him into a literal gambling machine. It addresses spiritual rebellion and the existential crisis that comes when one comes to realize that, if there’s a God, he might not care about his creations.    

It’s a lot on paper, I get that, but Moron Police somehow make it so manageable for their audience. With soaring, almost operatic vocals, multi-instrumentalist front man Sondre Skollevoll lays out some of the catchiest melodies and choruses you’ll hear on any project, metal, rock, pop, or otherwise, this year. The majority of the songs sit around the 3-4 minute mark and yet feel so jam packed with ideas (that work) that each is a journey of its own through Moron Police’s zany, colorful style of theatrical rock. Songs like “Pachinko Pt.1” are the anchor for this entire album, reestablishing plot points and thematic material, while closing one-two punch “The Sentient Dreamer” and “Giving Up the Ghost” reveal said themes in their final form. The songcrafting of this band brings closure to the themes (even ones from their previous album) and plots in a way that will leave you with a strong desire to call your friends just to tell them you love them so damn much. 

Because, at its core, this is a band processing its grief and honoring its friend the only way they know how: by blasting him up into space as a glorified pinball machine to meet his maker. And when the last notes, a prerecorded drum solo by Petterson, lead the song to its final crescendo, you’ll find yourself elated, emotional, and fully realizing that Moron Police have cemented themselves as one of the most engaging, most interesting, and most daring progressive acts of the 2020s. 

For fans of… Haken.

3. Dreams of Being Dust The World Is a Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid To Die (Post Hardcore)

It’s hard for me to write this without bringing up politics. Sitting here now, as civil unrest has exploded in the past week and as we approach the one year mark of Donald Trump’s second presidency, I feel this disgust, loathing, and hatred for where we’ve found ourselves as a country. I’m sure to many of you, this is the point where I start to lose you. Stay with me. There’s a point. 

I’m fairly new to The World is a Beautiful Place… but from my limited scope they’ve always been a fairly political band. Their last album Illusory Walls was a dystopian progressive rock album about our current, capitalist hellscape and the daily grind to work yourself into an early grave. It was dreary, but ended with hope, as songs “Infinite Josh” and “Fewer Afraid” being monolith end caps that served as a reminder to love your life and find joy in this experience. 

Well if Illusory Walls was a dystopian, or rather post-dystopian album where one hobbles through the wreckage, finding hope in the ruins of society, then Dreams of Being Dust is the prequel, a grim, bleak, furious collection of songs that perfectly articulate all the dread and anger I’ve bottled inside me this last year. The group completely abandons the shimmering post-hardcore and midwest emo of previous works in favor of a sound that leans heavily on hardcore and metalcore riffs, harsh vocals, and brutal breakdowns. It’s an artistic decision that alienated plenty of their fanbase, but for this music reviewer it was the direction shift I was craving from the group. Not only does the heavier sound work for vocalist Josh Cyr’s cynical, flat delivery, but it fixes many of the pacing issues that its predecessor had. Sure, there are plenty of moments where the album breathes (“Oubliette” is a haunting, bitter rebuke of our current political system), but there’s enough violent energy to keep this album moving. 

Coming into this album, I expected a lot of the same of what I got on their previous effort. What I received was an album that sank its teeth into me and didn’t let go. Like the slowburn, breathtakingly powerful build during the second half of closer “For Those Who Will Outlive Us,” this album stares you down and forces you to face it. It spares none of its fury, establishing itself as one of the best hardcore albums of the year, which is ironic given that it comes from a non-hardcore band. Yeah, it’s aggressive (opener “Dimmed Sun” is a mosh from start to finish) and yeah, it’s political, but this is the kind of art we need artists making in this time. Something needs to be left behind when we’re gone. 

For fans of…Every Time I Die. 

2. The Age of Ephemerality Bruit (Post Metal)

I’ve really struggled these past few years as a teacher. It isn’t the fault of my students, or my training, or my peers, or the school I work at, or even this dark, dystopian world we find ourselves in. It’s the fact that we’re losing sight of what it means to be human. We’re losing sight of meaning. 

When social media was new, it was such an exciting thing. For someone who had just been moved across the country, it was a bridge between worlds, a way to stay attached to my old friends and keep up with my new ones. It was a way to get exposure to new music artists (that’s how I discovered Coheed and Cambria!), and gain new experiences. But as time has gone on, it has morphed into a conveyer belt of media. Posts from friends are replaced by pictures and advertisements. Dozens of albums drop each Friday of each week, and are constructed to play with an algorithm that drops you into obscurity when you take a moment to breathe. Artists chase moments over true, lasting creation. News outlets treat reactions and soundbites as news. It is within this onslaught of media and consumption, that one finds themselves gasping for air and drowning in a lack of meaning.    

The Age of Ephemerality is a violent rebellion against that, an album that is challenging and rewarding, a piece of art that commands your attention and requires disconnection from all distraction and fleeting reaction. Composed of four members (Theophile Antolinos, Julien Aoufi Luc Blanchot, Clément Libes, each multi-instrumentalists in their own respect) Bruit are a group capable of producing astonishingly immense walls of sound. Together they create a blend of post rock, symphonic music, and electronic that is a monumental tome of sound. At times this album flirts with the edges of what your ears can physically take in. It’s overwhelming, all-encompassing, bombastic, and the perfect metaphor for this cacophony that is media consumption in the 2020s. Bruit have taken the reins from bands like Godspeed You! Black Emperor and Russians Circles, and have created an album that perfectly disrupts our need to swipe through sounds and images. 

For fans of… Isis.

  1. Vaxis III: The Father of Make Believe Coheed and Cambria (Progressive Rock)

At the final spot, I want to acknowledge my own bias. Yes, I have unapologetically been a pretty huge Coheed and Cambria fan my entire life. They were one of the first bands I discovered in high school that connected to my identity and are one that I have continually found comfort in as I’ve entered the various stages of my life. I will also acknowledge that, in recent years, I have found myself growing slightly detached from their recent releases. Sure, Vaxis I was a solid return to form, if not slightly bloated.Vaxis II, however, was an absolute misstep and probably the most disconnected I’ve been from the band since The Color Before the Sun (it’s their only release I never return to). That being said, I regularly return to the albums of theirs that made me, broke me, and healed me. So all of this serves as a preface to say that yes, I am a really huge fan of their music, and yes, this year’s final spot might lean hard into that.  

But dammit, they really hit it out of the park on this one. 

Dismissing conversations about the story for a second (because every Coheed and Cambria album except one is part of a larger, science fiction saga), the music on this album is Coheed at their heaviest, most emotional, and most energetic in a decade. Their versatility is on full display here, from the pop-y opener “Goodbye Sunshine,” to the hardcore leanings of “Blind Side Sonny” and “Play the Poet,” to the epic and emotive closing multi-suite track “The Continuum.” It truly is a smorgasbord of everything that Coheed does really well. This could, of course, be a detriment to people who haven’t previously enjoyed their music, but for even casual fans there’s a little something from each of their eras to keep them engaged. 

The heart of this album, however, is the story. And no… I don’t think you need to know the actual science fiction story going on beneath this to appreciate the sheer emotional power that resonates from every damn track of this album. Intro track “Yesterday’s Lost” is a goosebump inducing lullaby about the fears of losing those you love most in this world. Ballads “Meri of Mercy” and “Corner My Confidence” are genuinely heartbreaking songs about love lost and sought, highlighting the story of one of our characters as he searches tirelessly for his wife in the afterlife (and the neighboring dimension he’s sucked into). Closer “The Continuum I-IV” is the closest to awe and terror I’ve felt since “Gravity’s Union.” 

Fueled by the loss of Claudio Sanchez’ grandfather during COVID (who was also the inspiration for the character Sirus Amory), this album is about saying goodbye to him as much as it is a statement on the state of the band. Sanchez, the mastermind behind the project, has hinted that the future of the band is uncertain after Vaxis V, the final chapter in the entire Amory Wars(?). That’s still presumably about half a decade away (if you take into account that each album takes about three years to write and record), but it seems to be fueling Claudio’s creativity. Having to say goodbye to these characters and, potentially, this universe, has given him the inspiration to write their darkest and most hard-hitting project since The Afterman back in 2013. 

So yes, I’m a huge Coheed fan (I hesitate to call myself a “super fan” because trust me… there are people that love this band waaaaay more than I do), but regardless of that fact, this is an incredibly fun, smartly created progressive rock album that highlights a band operating at their top levels. The choruses are massive and catchy. The story is emotional. The album pacing is beautifully constructed. And on top of it all, Claudio Sanchez, Travis Stever, Zach Cooper, and Josh Eppard have established why they are still one of the best progressive rock acts out there. And for the first time in a LOOOOOOOONG while, I’m really excited to see where they go next. 

For fans of… Rush.

Categories
Music Reviews

“Reptilian Brain” Alpha Male Tea Party

If you want to stir some serious shit online, enter a progressive rock forum and mention the vocalist. For those uninitiated in these types of conversations, vocalists regularly serve as a serious trigger point, and the discourse surrounding them often oscillates between complete adoration to pure loathing, to the point where one’s perception of a band is seemingly ruined because of one member’s performance. The amount of weight that your Spencer Sotelos, James Labries, and Claudio Sanchez’s bear is truly monumental, and it lends itself well to a conversation about the purpose of vocalists, especially in your progressive genres that tend to be more complex and layered. Many bands have approached this conversation (or at least, their fan’s disdain for vocals) by either releasing instrumental versions of albums or even abandoning their vocals altogether (ala Night Verses), but very rarely do we see bands take on the task of incorporating vocals into previously instrumental music. 

There’s a good reason for it. When your music is already a slew of heavy, dizzyingly complex riffs, the addition of vocals could lead to a muddying of the waters of sorts. I certainly can’t perceive a band like Animals as Leaders or Plini adding a vocalist, as there would be nothing extra to add. If you’re going to add vocals, there has to be a purpose. 

I imagine this conversation arose among the fans of Alpha Male Tea Party, a Liverpool rock group whose music dances somewhere between the manic energy of Tera Melos and the heavy riffage of The Physics House Band, as singles from the newest project started to drop. While, up until their most recent release, this group has been purely instrumental, their songs have always demonstrated an understanding of tension and atmosphere as well as a mature comprehension of how to write a hook without words. This attention to songwriting as a craft has landed them squarely in the middle of this conversation, as the band has decided on Reptilian Brain to hand guitarist Tom Peters and bassist Ben Griffiths vocal duties. It was a bit of a gamble. To add vocals might add an extra layer of emotional depth and warmth. It might help the band express messages that, in this tumultuous era of miscommunication (or lack thereof entirely), often get lost in instrumental music. It might also result in an album that feels jam packed with too many ideas. 

To cut to it, this decision pays off in spades. 

Reptilian Brain is a masterclass in the blending of chaos and order, intricacy and atmosphere. Each song is an amalgamation of rock genres and sounds with its own arc, unique climax, and energy. Songs like “Hostess Imperial” and “Battle Crab” bounce and stumble through math rock riffs while closers “Sniper’s Dream” and “All Become One When the Sun Comes to Earth” ascend with triumphant post rock riffs and space rock atmosphere. And while these songs would stand on their own, the strength of this album lies in the combination of these massive instrumental moments with vocal hooks that are just as infectious and weighty. 

To understand the strength of their decision to add vocals, look no further than album centerpiece: “A Terrible Day to Have Eyes.” On its own, the instrumentals of this song serve as the backbone of a chugging, punchy, midtempo banger. With the inclusion of vocals, however, this material is elevated into a heartbreaking story of a violent, childhood experience, and subsequently a song about trauma and grief. It’s a slow burn that builds to one of the most gratifying sing-a-long portions of any song from this year, but it’s also a strong example of what makes this album so fantastic. The vocals are simply another layer that adds chaos and heart to an album that would otherwise be a strong, if unassuming, rock album. Beyond the stellar, mature musicianship (the topsy turvy riffs, the groovy basslines, the hyperactive drumming), this is an album that sees a band reaching their full potential because of the addition of lyrics. Each song serves as a breakdown of our modern social and political hellscape, one that attempts to reduce us to our reptilian brain. This album is a statement fighting against that. 

If you haven’t checked AMTP’s previous work, none of this matters. What does matter, however, is that this is one of the best rock albums of the year. It’s a collection of smartly crafted, fun, unique rock songs that dances between progressive, math, grunge, and space rock, and an album that solidifies AMTP as one of the most criminally underrated acts of the past decade. 

My Rating: 4/5

Categories
Best of Music

Top 30 Albums of 2024

This has been one of the weirder years of music. For every album that’s fairly accessible there’s another that’s just downright challenging. I’m not sure what that reveals about the year I’ve had or my listening habits, but there’s a lot to scratch your head at, and there’s a lot to dig into and appreciate. 

I only ask one thing of you. Whether you hate them or love them, listen to them regularly or have never heard of them, I ask for your engagement. Send me emails or messages. Subscribe to my writing (I promise to post more in the coming year than I have previously). Let me know what you’re digging yourself or what you’ve listened from last year that’s not on this list. It’s the way that we keep this thing alive and, let’s be honest, with a growing family, career commitments, and other distractions, this is really hard to do regardless of how passionate I am for it. I’m not asking for your pity, but it helps keep the engine lubricated and the wheels spinning.

Lastly, thank you for your time. Thanks for reading or scrolling. Thanks for being present. In a digital age where things are more bite sized and easily digestible, I seem to have gotten more long-winded. This may be an anomaly and next year I may return to paragraphs, but I guess when the spirit moves you, you gotta do whatcha gotta do. 

Without further ado, let’s dig into these albums.

Honorable Mentions:

Samurai Lupe Fiasco (Hip-hop) Smart storytelling and chill beats. 

In a Landscape Max Richter (Piano) Sparse atmospheric piano music. 

Mountainhead Everything Everything (Indie Pop) Pleasant indie pop for a nice summer day. 

FLIGHT b741 King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard (Blues Rock) King Gizz has fun with 70’s psyche rock. 

Mahashmashana Father John Misty (Singer Songwriter) Trippy, lounge rock.

Top 30 Albums:

30. Vestiges of Verumex Visidrome Gnome (Stoner Rock)

I’d initially thought about moving this album up on the list, not because it was necessarily better than some of the others that come after it, but because it’s so damn goofy. I was concerned that, if I was actually going to get you to check out this list, I would need to start somewhere safer… but then I remembered that, if you’re looking at this list, chances are pretty good that you’re prepared for some weird shit. So, here we are. 

On the surface, Gnome is a gimmick band. They dress up as gnomes, sing songs about fantastical lands and quests, and, in the title track, sing with silly voices, but hold on! Don’t close the tab yet! The reason why this album made the list is because, despite all these really odd qualities, the riffs are there!

Vestiges of Verumex Visidrome is the child of sludge/ doom metal acts like Black Sabbath, Mastodon, and Baroness. Song after song swings and grooves with an attitude of a band from Alabama instead of Belgium (where Gnome herald from). If you’re looking for an album that makes you want to chop down a tree, save a damsel, and fight an ogre, this is the one for you. 

For fans of…Black Label Society

29. My $tory Got $tories Bruiser Wolf (Hip-hop)

There’s hip-hop that makes you think deeply about complex social issues like police brutality, poverty, and generational trauma. And then there’s Bruiser Wolf. That probably makes it sound like the album is one to just have on in the background as you hang with your friends, but I assure you that it is very much the opposite. You need to be actively listening to appreciate how damn funny this one is. This album is a masterclass in how to write punchline after punchline. Wolf is a wholly unique artist in that every song is a series of couplets designed to set up and then deliver a hilarious zinger. His flow is closer to that of a stand up comedian than a rapper, and Wolf unfolds a life of sex, drugs, and hustler bar after bar after bar. I have laughed more listening to this album than I have listening to anything else in quite some time. I can promise that you will not hear another hip-hop artist like Bruiser Wolf this year, next year, or any time soon.   

For fans of… Old Dirty Bastard.

28. The Bird of a Thousand Voices Tigran Hamasyan (Jazz Fusion)

Scoring a video game has to be hard work. The music is what drives not only the action, but the player themselves. It’s a delicate balance between propelling the player forward with frantic energy and giving the player space to breathe with dense atmosphere. So naturally, when I heard that Armenian keyboardist Tigran Hamasyan was going to be creating and scoring his own video game, I was intrigued. Hamasyan is known for his angular, polyrhythmic piano compositions, so I had confidence that the intense parts of the game would be driven by his djent inspired, often glitchy playing style, but would his score be able to articulate the calm as well? Would it immerse the player into the mythical world of Armenian folklore that he was attempting to construct? 

Well, it’s on my list, so the answer is yes. The Bird of a Thousand Voices is a massive album at just a hair over an hour and a half, densely packed with heavy, rhythmically complex songs (“The Kingdom”, “The Well of Death and Resurrection”) as well as moments of soothing peace (“The Bird of a Thousand Voices”, “Bells of Memory”). Hamasyan’s metal and Armenian folk music influences are on full display here, creating a score that feels as exciting and innovative as it does cohesive. It does a brilliant job of establishing and revisiting themes in a unique way that, without even playing the game, allows the reader to compose an idea of what is supposed to be happening at each level of the game. I guarantee, if you’re a fan of jazz, metal, or video game music, you’re going to find something to enjoy with this album. 

For fans of…Brad Mehldau. 

27. Critterland Willi Carlisle (Americana)

One of my favorite things about doing this list is that there’s a lot more drama than one might think. Albums jockey each other’s status (or, eventually lose favor the more I listen to them). Some even disappear on to my “Albums I Listened To” list only to make a reappearance back onto my “Top Albums of the Year” list like some underdog football team. This album is one of the latter because, even though I didn’t listen to it all the time this year, I could not get it out of my head. I found myself continually suggesting it to friends and family, and regularly hummed the melodies of my favorites even when it wasn’t on my list. So grab yourself a cup of whiskey and find yourself a slowly setting sun. This one’s for the cowboys. The loners. The drunks. 

Don’t let the seemingly goofy cover fool you. This album is a collection of raw, vulnerable americana/bluegrass/ folk songs about queer identity (“Two-Headed Lamb), addiction (“Higher Lonesome”), and living free (“Critterland”) and a masterclass on storytelling. Carlisle portrays himself as the travelling troubadour, weaving very modern issues into a sound that has been at home in the backwoods of Appalachia for the past three hundred years. In a year where country music saw some of it’s biggest numbers for streaming and engagement, this is the album that captivated and resonated with me long after I’d thought I forgot about it. So if you need a good cry, a good hug, or just want to hear a good story, this one’s for you. 

For fans of… Woody Gutherie.

26. Of the Last Human Being Sleepytime Gorilla Museum (Avant Garde)

When I was in high school, sitting in the back of my junior level English class, I had a friend named Jonathan. He was one of the few metalheads that I was friends with back then, and when we weren’t… working on assignments… we were sharing with each other our latest music finds. I bring this all up because it was at this time that I was first exposed to the weirdest (and still one of the weirdest) bands I’ve ever had the pleasure of encountering. They were a collection of musicians: xylophonists and saxophonists, recorder-players and guitarists. They played in a genre that can only be explained as a mix between carny-folk and metal. They shocked the world (and specifically my world), dropped three wild albums, and then disappeared in 2007. 

Well reader, the circus is back in town. Resurrecting material they recorded back in 2010-11, they started a kickstarter to help bring the album and a companion film back to life and, using elixirs, a defibrillator, and the body parts of many different corpses, were able to resurrect this very strange and evocative album. 

Loosely connected by a story about the last living human being and the public’s fear, scrutiny, destruction, etc. of it, there’s a lot to try to dig into with this project. If you get hung up on how weird it is, you probably won’t like it. Most of you probably won’t like it. But try to focus on one bit and you might just come to an understanding of it. Listen to the wildly intricate compositions that melds influences of folk, prog, metal (“El Evil” is a thrash metal song on violin), and carnival music. Observe the truly astounding vocal harmonies of Nils Frykdahl and Carla Kihlstedt as they serve as the heralds for the coming of the last human (how can it be the last human if people are also observing it? Good question). Appreciate how outlandish and bold some of the song choices are. This truly feels experimental, especially in a day and age where many creators and artists have access and an audience to do whatever the hell they want. This album will unsettle you, reader, and it will probably also test you. But I can promise it will linger long after its final notes play. 

For fans of… post-apocalyptic carnival music.

25. Revelator ELUCID (Hip-hop)

If you’ve dared venture onto the internet this year, you’ve found it’s a perpetually paranoid place. Conspiracy theories present themselves as news while tinfoil hat wearing basement dwellers denounce science and fact. Political adversaries point fingers at each other, slinging the warmest shit from the pile that is quickly growing around them. Every day citizens are drawn further apart by carefully constructed political and social lines. We are told that the world is black and white. It is or it isn’t. 

This paranoia is felt in the claustrophobic beats and ELUCID’s aggressive, unrelenting flow, and rich lyricism. It can be felt in the glitchy, electronic break of “SLUM OF A DISREGARD” and the industrial pulsing of “CCTV”. It can be found in the muddy, psychedelic “14.4” and “IN THE SHADOW OF IF”. At times dream, at other moments nightmare, this is an album that demands the listener’s attention and is packed with enough to encourage one to return to it again and again. 

For fans of… Del the Funkee Homosapian.

24. Light Verse Iron and Wine (Folk)

There’s a lot of heavy music on this list, in genre, composition, and content. I’m sure that comes as no surprise to my frequent readers. It should also then come as no surprise to you that every once in a while I need something calmer and brighter to balance out the grim dark. Light verse, as the teacher in me feels want to inform you, is poetry that sets out to be humorous and… light. It doesn’t mask some wheighty theme with uplifting stanzas or soothing imagery. It is meant to be easy to consume.  

Light Verse is a collection of folk songs that encompass the listener in a sense of peace. Accompanied by Samuel Beam’s whimsical, lilting voice, tip-toeing ukelele and guitar lines, and warm production, this is an album for summer days where time doesn’t really matter. Songs dance softly, stretching, smiling, lifting from one pleasant line to another. If you’re in need of something to elevate your mood, this albums going to do it for you.  

On a personal note, this album found me in one of these small, seemingly trivial moments. Sitting on my couch, I watched as my daughter practiced walking. She used the sofa to stand and then, turning, stumbled unsteadily towards her objective. At moments this was her mother or myself or the other sofa. Sometimes she made it, sometimes she didn’t, but as the symphonic climax of “Tears that Don’t Matter” rose to a crescendo I found that, indeed, the tears were falling. Her steps grew more confident. She fell less than she did during her previous attempt. And it was one of the most beautiful moments of my life. That’s what this album captures: it is a warm, simple moment. It is a reminder that when the world seems dark and paranoid and hope is lost, it is the light verses of our lives, the moments that are seemingly small, that matter the most. They’re the moments that make this life worth living. So put this album on. Smile at your children. Dance with your loved one. Stand outside and watch people as they walk by. Wave at your neighbor. You’re only as empty as a lost and found. 

For fans of… the little, intimate moments. 

23. Ridiculous and Full of Blood Julie Christmas (Sludge Metal)

As someone who collects physical media, I have a deep appreciation for artists who have a fully realized vision for their product. Even before I put on the album, the cover art should give me a good idea of what I’m going to be engaging with. It should reveal something about the album that, as I’m listening to the songs, simultaneously reveals something and develops itself over the course of the listening. And since you’re reading this on my website, you’ve scrolled past the album art for Julie Christmas’ latest album, and have already been affected by it. 

If I had to award a vocalist of the year award to anyone, it would be Christmas. That’s not because her vocals are “good” (read:soaring, beautiful, ethereal) in the way that one sometimes thinks of when it comes to a vocal performance, but because they are phenomenally effective. Christmas is completely unhinged. She shrieks, hisses, and moans over post/ doom metal riffs. Her emotions are torn from her very diaphragm to the point where you have to wonder if delivering this performance actually hurt. But you feel it, and when I’m looking at strong vocal performances that is what I’m looking for. I want to feel Christmas claw her way through the muck and shit of society that represses her voice.

So as you listen to the clattering, anxiety-inducing drumstick cadence of the opening track “ Not Enough” or the looming dread built within “The Lighthouse”, have the album artwork in front of you and stare at it. Gaze into Christmas’ maniacal grin, her blood stained mouth, her dead eyes. Feel unsettled. Feel her power. Feel her fury. 

For fans of… The Ocean.  

22. Loss of Life MGMT (Psychedelic Rock)

The trip is over. The neon colors spilling from the ceiling have faded away, evaporating on the wind in a sparkling haze. The swimming images have retreated back into the shadows that elongate with the setting sun. All that remains is the sense that something was there. Something was experienced. And the ego is left with a simultaneously comforting and unsettling fact. 

One day, we are going to die. 

This is perhaps a morbid way to introduce an album created by a band that, at one point, was responsible for the pop anthem “Kids” and the infectiously groovy “Electric Feel”, but that’s ultimately what this album is. Gone are the funkadelic synth lines and the massive pop choruses. Instead, they are replaced with a collection of songs that are still psychedelic in nature, but darker, and more sober. If many of their previous albums were a celebration of life and living in the moment, experiencing and feeling (especially if those experiences are elevated by substances), then this album is the reflection that comes after. It’s the dissection of the trip. Songs like “People in the Streets” and “Loss of Life” find the band contemplating mortality and one’s place in the world. Even “Bubblegum Dog” (one of my favorite songs this year), which feels more familiar to MGMT’s previous output, is a darker version of anything they’ve created so far, a song about change and growth that portrays maturity as a dog that haunts and lingers with you until you’re ready to make the change. 

So if you’ve grown up with MGMT like myself, give this album a chance. Sure it doesn’t sound like much fun, but maybe that’s the point, man. 

For fans of… Simon and Garfunkel. 

21. Charcoal Grace Caligula’s Horse (Progressive Metal)

I have a belief that, when there is societal unrest, music is at its best. I suppose that’s a really pessimistic way to look at art and the world, but it seems to be true. And as we wound ourselves up for another election cycle, that tension was palpable in quite a few albums released this year. I suspect this will only be exacerbated in the coming years, but that’s a conversation for another forum. 

I bring this up, however, not to stir shit with my audience but to set the stage for this album, a collection of songs that are ultimately about the breakdown of society and, most importantly, communication. Caligula’s Horse’s darkest album yet, it gravitates around the idea that when a society doesn’t talk, it is destroyed. This idea is explored in detail on the four part centerpiece “Charcoal Grace” where vocalist Jim Grey sings about a family torn apart by a father’s unwavering beliefs , his attempt to guilt his children back to his side when he’s on his deathbed, and the result of his hate as it remains imbedded within his children. Yeah… it’s dark. 

But within the darkness is a light. On songs like “The World Breathes with Me” and epic closer “Mute” (one of my favorite tracks from the year) the band implores its listeners to use their voices to speak out against the darkness, to find hope when there is none, and to seek an interconnectivity with other humans in a time that would divide them. This is their most emotional album to date, and one that will stay with the listener long after the final guitar notes echo out from the progressive metal mountaintop they were played from. 

For fans of… Breaking Benjamin. 

20. The Inevitable Fork Melted Bodies (Avant Garde Metal)

Back in 2020, I was absolutely blown away by the debut album of a band who sounded like if the Dead Kennedys were chewed up and vomited out with The Downward Spiral-era Nine Inch Nails and Mr. Bungle. Enjoy Yourself was violently overindulgent, as hilarious as it was angry, as Looney Toons as it was looney bin. I’m drawn back, in particular, to one of their music videos where, in a song about consumerism, they injected their own video with fake youtube ads, so many that it actually disrupted the flow of the track. They willingly destroyed their own art, and your consumption of their art, to make a point.

That takes dedication to a cause. That’s punk af.  

Enter The Inevitable Fork, an album released in four EPs before being reconfigured into an album that contained eerie interludes from Xiu Xiu vocalist Angela Seo. Frantic hardcore/industrial/noise riffs serve as sledgehammer for the band to pummel the listener while vocalist Andy Hamm maniacally screams lyrics about mental health, trauma, success, doubt, and regret and how all these factors form the fork that our lives inevitably lead to. 

What I’m continually drawn to about this band is how wholly original they are. Especially in a world where algorithms lump like sounding acts together to sell a product, Melted Bodies stand out as an act with an unwavering vision. It’s a vile, neon, grotesque, and sometimes unappealing vision, but it’s one that will draw you back in thanks to its smart songwriting, catchy choruses (yes, there are some), and unique flavor. 

For fans of… System of a Down. 

19. Coming of Age Mile Marker Zero (Progressive Rock)

If it isn’t apparent, I’m a sucker for a good progressive rock album. I’m sure it has something to do with it being a genre that I grew up listening to, but I appreciate how much variation there is across albums. Some feel familiar, referential of the sounds and albums that came before them, while others find bands pushing the boundaries of their sound, exploring new directions, styles, and subject matter. Mile Marker Zero are a group that very much falls in the former category. Their sound is heavily influenced by the progressive bands that came before them, and on this album, in particular, they explore the sounds of the bands that inspired them even further. 

If their previous album, The Fifth Row, was an exploration of the future and a story about the dangers of AI, government surveillance, and the Singularity, Coming of Age is a look backwards. Using progressive rock as a foundation, the album is about the band’s roots, exploring topics about growing up and leaving your friends and family behind to pursue your dreams. Drawing inspiration from Kansas, Rush, and Yes, the band crafts a smart collection of songs that delve into both the excitement and trepidation that come with having to leave the town you grew up in. It’s an incredibly heartfelt album from a relatively young band that lives one foot in both the past and future.  

For fans of… Steven Wilson

18. NO HANDS Joey Valence & Brae (Hip-hop)

Ok, you’ve seen the album cover. You know everything you need to know about this album. This one is in your face (Eat a booty with a side of fries/ Did a triple backflip, I ain’t even tried“). It’s goofy (“Teachers like thongs, always up in my business”). It’s unapologetically embarrassing (“You a small fry, you look like Toad/ I spit fire, I’m more like Bowser/ I got you scared, don’t piss your trousers”). And… the energy is there. Trading bars about nerd culture (and being “badass”) over a collection of boom bap/ house beats that sound like they belong in the 90’s/ early 00’s, Joey Valence and Brae have crafted an album of front to back bangers that are so infectious, hilarious (yes, they are aware of how ridiculous this album is), and punk that it’s really hard not to love it. This is for those of you who grew up in an age where coats were neon colored, tips were frosted, and pants were the size of circus tents. This is for the house party as much as driving with the top down on a warm summer evening. It’s for the skate park as much as the dance club. Grab your bucket hats, hair gel, and JNCO jeans. The 90’s aren’t dead, in fact, they are just getting started. 

For fans of… the Beastie Boys.

17. I Lay Down My Life For You JPEGMAFIA (Hip-hop)

It’s taken me a while to come around to JPEGMAFIA. There’s no doubt that he is a talented rapper, but I always felt like the beats he constructed were a little unpolished, a little unfinished. My opinion began to change with last year’s visceral Scaring the Hoes, and my opinion of him has only improved with this year’s release. 

I Lay Down My Life For You sees Peggy at his most refined. His signature sample heavy production is still there (and there are some truly wild ones on this album), but the beats feel more articulate, more complete than they have on some of his previous releases. The album is a rapidfire, punk rock affair, with most songs not reaching the three minute mark. Peggy is also at his most volatile, dropping heater after heater with his signature sneer. He calls out white people. He calls out his contemporaries (on “SIN MIEDO” he raps “Fake plug talkin’ Tubi rappers/ Got a machine behind ’em, and still they can’t fill up capacity with they raps”). It also sees him at his most vulnerable, discussing failed relationships on “I recovered from this” and his own shortcomings on “either on or off the drugs”. Regardless of the subject matter, JPEGMAFIA has officially cemented himself as one of the most ingenuitive, creative, and important rappers in the game on this one. He’s changing the game in a way that needs to be noted. 

On a side note… that Denzel Curry feature on “JPEGULTRA!” goes off. 

For fans of… MF DOOM.

16. War. Whores (Noise Rock)

This album is your neighbor working out in his garage. Next to pints of motor oil and empty PBR cans, he pumps out reps on a shitty bench press, pausing in between sets only to take a draw from his cigarette (yeah, he smokes cigarettes), crush a can of beer against his forehead, and rinse repeat. Yeah, he’s wearing a wife beater. Yeah, the bar touches his chest every time. Yeah, he’s blasting music. Yeah, it’s eight in the morning. He doesn’t give a shit. 

You might not like him, but he’s kind of a badass. 

That’s what this album is. You might not like it, but it’s kind of badass. There’s nothing complex to these riffs. The lyrics aren’t trying to say anything deep. It’s just ripper after ripper, an unrelenting 33 minute slugfest. It’ll get you storming around the pit, banging your head until your neck hurts, and throwing elbows. It’ll get you doing that even if you’re in your living room. So go ahead, shotgun a beer, take off your shirt, and go join your neighbor in the garage. It might be stupid, but it’s going to be fucking fun. 

For fans of… Pantera.

15. Melodies of Atonement Leprous (Progressive Rock)

Last year, one of my favorite albums was the solo project titled 16 by Leprous’ front man Einar Solberg. It was an incredibly personal progressive rock album, delving into Solberg’s past, incorporating some of the weirder elements found in Leprous’ material including symphonic and electronic elements. As I suspected (and Solberg confirmed), this was an intentional choice, and it was a way for him to incorporate some of his more off-kilter influences to allow the rest of the band to take the helm with the writing of their main project. 

The result is Leprous’ heaviest album in a hot minute, both lyrically and instrumentally. I came into Leprous at a weird time, jumping on board with their softest, most atmospheric release, 2019’s Pitfalls, and went back to discover some of their older heavier material when they played them all live during the pandemic. All this is to say that I don’t mind and even really enjoy their lighter/ poppier side, and that’s probably also why I really enjoy this most recent album because, even though it is their heaviest album, it is also one of their most accessible ones. Stomping, bouncy grooves, not to mention Baard Kolstaad’s intricate, off kilter drumming, are written within a fairly digestible pop structure, and that, on top of some of the band’s biggest choruses/ vocal moments, makes this one an album that touches on every part of the band’s sound that fans love. Songs like “Like a Sunken Ship” and epic closer “Unfree My Soul” swell to absolutely massive climaxes that I can attest translate to an almost larger than life status in the concert setting. If you’re someone who has never really appreciated metal music, but love great vocal performances, this is definitely one you should check. 

For fans of… Evanescence.

14. Every Sound Has a Color in the Valley of Night Pt.II Night Verses (Instrumental Metal)

You watch them for hours… days. Shapes spin and sway around a roaring bonfire as shadows rise and fall like tongues of flame. It’s hypnotic, powerful, dizzying, beautiful. You can’t look away, even when one of the shapes points in your direction and beckons you forward. Without taking a step, you are drawn to them, carried by something within you that is and isn’t your soul. Your body rises in the air over the fire, arms outstretched, becoming something new as the moon breaks from the clouds and bathes you in its dead eyed glow. The ritual is complete. A new life has begun. 

If the first part of this album, released last year, was the beginning of a ritual, fast paced, galloping, spiralling in and out of itself, then this year’s release, the second half, is the darker summoning at the end of the mass. There are plenty of intense, faster paced songs (“Plague Dancer” and “Crystal X”), but there’s also an incredible haunting post-metal-esq atmosphere to provide breathing room for the band’s trademark, tightly-woven sound. As I said last year, guitarist Nick Pirro, bassist Reilly Herrera, and drummer Aric Improta continue to prove that they are some of the best metal instrumentalists in the game, writing not only impressive but memorable riffs (“Phoenix V Invocation” is hands down the heaviest song you will hear this year). So light a candle, sit in the darkness, stare into the abyss, and immerse yourself in the second chapter of this behemoth of an album. Just don’t be surprised if you start to levitate. 

For fans of… Cloudkicker.

13. The New Sound Geordie Greep (Lounge Rock)

In 2019, the world and I were exposed to a band called Black Midi that was bold, experimental, new, and shockingly good. Following the release of their debut album Schlagenheim, they dismantled the BBC with a performance of “bmbmbm” that ended in absolute chaos and made one of the most affecting statements I’ve ever seen a new band make. They followed it up with two more incredible albums: 2021’s shimmering post-punk Cavalcade and 2022’s dark, proggy Hellfire (one of my favorite albums OF ALL TIME). 

And then, in 2024, vocalist and lead guitarist Geordie Greep unceremoniously announced that the band had broken up (something a chunk of the band wasn’t even aware of), and the next day, announced his solo album. The news was as shocking as it was disappointing, and many like me held their breath to see what sort of statement the former frontman would make. Was Greep capable of living up to the hype of a band that was literally at its peak? Was the decision to strike out on his own an act of hubris that would find him floundering without the voices of his bandmates?

Well Greep put fans’ concerns to ease with an album that is not only one of the best of the year, but one of the weirdest, horniest, and most vile. The album conceptually follows the lives of many despicable men: generals, business men, executives, and producers. All of them are desperate for sex, wealth, power, and status, and all of them are fucking pathetic. On lead single, “Holy, Holy”, Greep’s protagonist hires a prostitute to flirt with him (and eventually have sex with him) at a local bar, allowing him to cosplay as the debonair, sophisticated man he longs to be. On “Through a War” a military man (presumably a general or a dictator), regales another nameless woman about his triumphs and victories, his story swirling with sex and violence as he attempts to bed her. There’s something hilarious about their desperation, and it’s largely what makes palatable an album that will have many listeners revolted. (Seth Evans from HMLTD shouting “THIS TOWN IS FUCK” on “Motorbike”, a song where a man going through a midlife crisis abandons his family and life to ride his super cool motorcycle out of town, might be the funniest thing I’ve heard this year).     

Driving all of these stories forward is music that can only be described as deranged lounge rock. Latin influence (samba, mambo, tango) infuses each of these soft rock songs with a flair that paints the setting of a shitty jazz lounge from the 70s. Suede and faux leather adorn the furniture as the smell of cheap cologne, whiskey, and cigarettes permeate the walls and air. These elements were used as accents in Black Midi, but Greep leans heavily on them with this project. The arrangements add to the concept, making everything feel cheesy and tacky in a way where you can’t tell if Greep is being sincere or not. If this sounds like an insult, I assure you it’s not, because everything here works. Narratively, musically, tonally, Greep has succeeded in crafting a project that oozes with a deplorability reserved for men stuck in arrested development with mommy issues, sexual impotency, and fragile egos.  

For fans of… Steely Dan?

12. Friend of a Phantom Vola (Progressive Metal)

There’s something about knowing when to release an album that denotes a specific understanding of the listening experience of the whole rather than the experience of listening to a few one-off singles. I’m sure there are plenty of features behind the scenes that dictate when a band can actually release their material (mostly factors out of their control), but when it works in their favor, it really helps the album pop. Such is the case of Vola’s latest release, an album that echoes with a haunted, empty atmosphere perfect for the November day it was released. 

It feels like Vola was really going through something on this one. Songs like “We Will Not Disband”, “I Don’t Know How We Got Here”, and heavy hitter “Hollow Kid” all reverberate with a nostalgia and longing that is only exacerbated by lyrical topics of death, passing time, and memory. That’s not to say that Vola has neglected the grooves and djenty riffs that made them such a growing powerhouse in the prog metal scene (opener “Cannibal” features a killer performance from In Flames’ Anders Friden), but in general there is a sadness throughout the album that leaves the listener with the sensation that some great loss has left its impact on the group. The cherry on top is closer “Tray” which some might say is a downer, but to me is the perfect statement to wrap the album up. Like many of the other songs, it feels like the epilogue of a ghost recounting his life as everything fades to grey. If you’re looking for an album when the world is grey and monochromatic, this is the album for you. 

For fans of… Sleep Token.

11. TOEHIDER EPS (Progressive Metal)

If you’ve made it this far onto my list, you’ve probably noticed that there’s a lot of “fun” here. Many of my favorite albums didn’t take themselves too seriously, which probably says something about my own mental state wrestling the various events that occurred in the Year of Our Lord 2024. Well, as we approach my top ten albums, there is one collection of releases that I continued to return to over the course of the year: the “release a month” madness that was Toehider’s EP project. 

Starting technically back in August of 2023, this idea was a mad dash of creativity and lunacy that saw progressive metal goofball, Toehider (a collaboration of solo artist Michael Mills, and artist Richard Evensand), exploring a wide variety of genres, expanding not only their catalogue but their sound. While there are twelve EPs within this release schedule, there are three that stood out to me. 

The first, and most cohesive, is the April, 80’s synthesizer infused SPACE FAMOUS. This EP is a demonstration of what makes Toehider such an exciting artist, and it’s the one I would recommend to the casual reader of this list. Songs like “Present Prism” and “Skipping Summer” sound right at home on a Warren Miller soundtrack from the aforementioned time, with punchy drum patches, brooding synth lines, and catchy pop choruses while the title track dives headfirst into power/glam metal akin to Judas Priest or Iron Maiden. There isn’t a single song I would consider skipping on this EP and, had it been a full album experience, would have easily breached the top ten of this list. 

The second one, Rediscovery is for the more adventurous listener and the one who is familiar with Toehider and wants to just find out what types of influences have led Michael Mills to pursue the zany, wacky type of progressive metal that he plays. It’s an album of covers, ranging from a part-manic, part-heartfelt rendition of Sia’s “Chandelier” (Mills has some serious pipes), to the Muppet Show’s “Can You Picture This?”. Yeah, it’s that ridiculous. He even manages to make Focus’ criminally underrated 70’s jam “Hocus Pocus” sound even more deranged. This one is a lot of fun and a definite recommendation for those who want to know just how the hell Mills got to where he is musically. 

The final EP from the session is the dark, doomy X, an album that explores his heavier side. This album struck me, because while Mills has always been an artist that doesn’t take himself too seriously, mixing absurd lyricism with a touch of self-deprecating humor, there are songs that delve into topics of self-doubt and feelings of inadequacy/ missing inspiration. It’s not as fun as a lot of his other stuff (and, again, it’s shockingly candid about the creative process), but it’s still a great EP worthy of digging into, especially if the previous two peaked your interest. 

That’s not to say that all the EPs from this session worked. The thirty minute song of ambient sounds on Stereo Night Ash: Music for Relaxation, Meditation, Decatastrophizing, and Deep Sleep is a creative departure but one that did nothing for me, and the collection of duck themed children’s show tunes on Children of the Sun 3 (no, I’m not writing the whole name), is goofy but ultimately not one that I could return to without serious internal embarassment. But that’s the allure of Toehider. He’s unafraid to explore any avenue of music, and the results are usually pretty great. 

Some might ask “why not just release all the best tracks on one album,” but I think the answer is pretty clear. Regardless of the release, each of these EPs stands on its own, has its own flavor, and to combine them would have inevitably led to a project that was strong in songwriting, but lacking in cohesiveness. So, if you’re feeling goofy, check some of these EPs out. Regardless of which one you choose, you’re in for a wild ride. 

For fans of… Thank You Scientist.   

10. GNX Kendrick Lamar (West Coast Hip-hop)

If you’ve been keeping up with pop culture or hip-hop culture, there’s no way in hell you missed the Kendrick-Drake beef. One of the most massive events of the year, it saw Lamar go absolutely IN on Drake, dropping diss track after diss track until Drake had to bow out with a pathetic attempt to make it sound like he was bored with the whole thing and was moving on. Kendrick continued his victory lap with a massive Amazon Prime concert and a one off song, but it seems that to win wasn’t enough. To play the Super Bowl wasn’t enough. Kendrick had more to say, and that’s what GNX is.   

It was inevitable that many of Kendrick’s fans were underwhelmed by this album. It wasn’t some epic, multi-layered puzzle for them to dissect like To Pimp A Butterfly or Mr. Morale and the Big Steppers. It wasn’t even a chart poacher like Damn. Instead, it was an album to silence those that felt he could only make high concept albums and those that felt he’d abandoned his west coast roots. The whole thing is a love letter to the music he grew up with and the music continuing to be made in that region. “Reincarnated” is a track that sounds like a 2Pac song that reflects on the struggles of black artists before and “heart part. 6” has the g-funk sound that artists like Snoop made famous. So if you don’t get it, that’s ok. It’s not for you, or really me. It’s the album that Kendrick wanted to make, and it’s really freaking good. 

When the beef with Drake was at its peak, I remember stating that this was a great thing for hip-hop, and Kendrick’s career, if for no other reason than it lit a fire under his ass to create. This album is Kendrick’s angriest. He lashes out at his contemporaries (“wacced out murals”), addressing and creating beef in real time. He reminds the public that he can still make year defining bangers (“squabble up”, “tv off”). He struts up to the throne and takes the crown, demanding his peers either step up or step back (“man in the garden”). It’s a messy album, and it’s by no means perfect, but it feels in many ways like someone lighting a firecracker and throwing it into the box that is hip-hop. And until anyone can prove him wrong, I agree with Kendrick. I think he deserves it all. 

For fans of… Beating a Drake… errr…. Dead horse.

9. Cool World Chat Pile (Noise Rock)

Two years ago, when I wrote my piece on Chat Pile’s debut album God’s Country, I commented on how I felt sorry for the band because they had set the bar too high on their inaugural release. Combining nu metal riffs with fuzzy production and Raygun Busch’s unsettling, cynical lyrics, it was an album that lived in the dark corners of my mind not only for the year, but the time in between now and then. To be honest, I didn’t expect the band to survive (or wish to survive) the year or two that came. There was no reason for me to believe this. There were no interviews hinting at turmoil within the band, nor songs serving as pointed jabs at one or another, I just figured with something THAT good, the band would choose to self-immolate and float off into the atmosphere. 

But Chat Pile are back after a two years of touring and growth and they sound… worn. Everything that God’s Country did incredibly well is still there, but the edges are frayed. The riffs are more plodding, sludge-y, doomy. Busch’s vocals are exhausted, blunt, and garbled like a man who’s been punched in the face one too many times. Although the band has stated that this album is an expansion of their sound, focusing on the larger world instead of the issues more central to Oklahoma City where they came from, this album feels more intimate, more personal than the previous one. Songs like “Frownland” and “Masc” explore feelings of voiceless and powerless. The album explores how the world beats people down through violence, be it physical, historical, systemic, and even political. The band almost seems to be saying that, to talk about the issues they did on their previous album is pointless. Information will be skewed. Spirits will be broken. Truth will be buried. Indeed this idea is cemented on the mammoth closer “No Way Out” where, over skittering, frantic picking, Busch shrieks about the hopelessness felt in this world and the lies passed down to us consumers, voters, citizens, by powers that cannot be confronted or changed. As we enter a new year, this is certainly a dour one to explore, but perhaps also a necessary one.

For fans of… The Jesus Lizard.

8. Where’s My Utopia Yard Act (Post Punk)

It’s hard for me to really pinpoint why I love this album. Is it the funky basslines? Is it the spoken word, highly dry, vocal delivery? Is it the way that the whole album feels in part both heavily sarcastic and bleedingly sincere? Even writing this, I might as well backtrack and say that it’s probably all of the above. What Yard Act have done is construct a slew of cheeky, post-punk songs that sneer at consumerism, pop culture, toxic masculinity, and people who think they’ve got it all figured out. This album is part party (“We Make Hits” and “Dream Job”) and part the ravings of the dude leaning over the bar next to you (“Down by the Stream”, “Fizzy Fish”), drunkenly rambling on about some story from his childhood, referencing people and places like you’re supposed to know them between drags of his cigarette. Regardless of the direction, the groovy pocket is what carries this album from one idea to the other. So, like you would at the bar, pour yourself a pint and bob your head along. Yeah, you’re doing it because you want this drunk to just leave you alone. But you’re also doing it because you’re kind of having a really good time.  

For fans of… Idles. 

7. Stasis Hippotraktor (Sludge Metal)

Alright look, we all know Spotify is the root of all music evil, but every once in a while they provide me with solid data on what my listening habits for the year were and, more importantly, remind me of how much I listened to specific albums. Hippotraktor’s Stasis was an album I sort of slept with. It remained on my year end list from the time of its release in June up until now, happily content to take up space and accompany my drive to work and other weekly activities. It wasn’t braggadocious. It didn’t demand I immediately talk about it with friends, if anything it was fairly unassuming. But here it is, breaching the top ten, to which I’m sure many of you are thinking “how?” 

It’s because, while it does take a little time to digest, this is an album that needs to be listened to by anyone who considers themselves a metal fan. What Hippotraktor have managed to do is construct an album that feels as grand as its album cover suggests. Stasis is an album that is a perfect merger of post metal atmosphere and crushing djenty riffage. It knows when to let the listener breathe and when to drop them into breakdowns brutal enough to fell a mastodon (don’t believe me… check that beatdown at the end of “Silver Tongue”), something all the more impressive considering this is only the band’s second outing. Over instrumentals that feel like ocean waves crashing against a cliff face, vocalist Stefan de Graef howls like a chained man attempting to tear his bindings from the rock, defying all who would stand in his way. If that sounds epic, that’s because it is. Everything about this album suggests a group that knows more about song construction than their discography would suggest, and the result is an album that demands multiple listens and yet will grab the listener after just one. 

So thank you Spotify. You’re a terrible company, but without you I might not have realized how much I listened to this one. And as this album commands its listener, be better. Live a richer existence. Defy that which attempts to force you into complacency. 

For fans of… Gojira. 

6. Wheels Within Wheels MEER (Progressive Pop)

Three years ago, one of my favorite albums (and one I continually return to) was from a Norwegian band that completely blew me away with an album that had its roots in progressive rock and pop with a heavy leaning into broadway music sensibilities. They were the kind of group that immediately landed themselves on my “to watch” list, and I waited eagerly to see what would drop next from the talented group of musicians. 

Well, if I loved Playing House, then I really freaking love this year’s release. Wheels Within Wheels is a worthy follow up to its predecessor, an album that doesn’t change their signature blend of genres so much as refine it. The choruses are bigger, the songwriting is smarter, the pacing is even more engrossing. Sitting at about an hour, this album is comfortable taking its time to immerse you in the rich world Meer have constructed, using massive ballads like “Today Tonight Tomorrow” and “Mother” to build atmosphere and provide space for some of the more energetic tracks (“Golden Circle”). 

I can’t stress this enough, whether you’re a prog-head or a casual music listener, you need to be listening to this band (and subsequently, this album). There’s a little something for everyone. Songs like “Chains of Change” and “Behave” might appeal to those of you who love a good radio jam, while the epic, bring the curtain down closer “This is the End”, serves as an artistic statement that throws everything at the canvas and leaves nothing left (for god sakes, they even have lyrical callbacks to their previous album. If that doesn’t give you goosebumps, I don’t know what will). This is a band that has earned the hype and, as I said last time, I literally can’t wait to see what they come up with next. 

For fans of… ensemble tracks that lead into the intermission of musicals.  

5. Highly Irresponsible Better Lovers (Hardcore)

Look, I had a whole thing written up about this super group including the brief history of the breakups of both Every Time I Die and The Dillinger Escape Plan and how each might have contributed to the topics of communication breakdown, disillusionment, and the end of things (times, love, friendship, etc.). But the reality is, you don’t really need to know about the band’s baggage to get this album. Realistically, the band probably wants you to move on from the tumultuous endings each respective group faced, and it’s not like you need context to understand why this album is so freaking good. Composed of veterans of the hardcore and metalcore scene, this album is exactly what you need when you’re having a bad day and need to punch your steering wheel. Combing the groove infected, head banging riffs of Every Time I Die with the unhinged vocals of The Dillinger Escape Plan, Highly Irresponsible is half an hour of face-melting, gut punching hardcore music that blows your face up, picks up the pieces, and slaps it back on your skull. And you’re going to ask for more. Every band member is firing on all cylinders here, ripping through songs about failed communication, the end of things, and the general feeling of disillusionment that seems to be permeating all members of American life. Unlike some supergroup albums that have mature songwriting but feel more like a shouting match of personalities vying for control of the reins, this album feels like a singular vision. The boys came together out of a mutual respect for each other’s ability to write cataclysmic jams. They’re not ready to let go of their music (and hopefully never will be). And they can put on a decimating live show (seriously, every band member knows how to perform). At only half an hour, there isn’t really much space to breathe on this one. The boys really bottled electricity on this one. Hopefully they’re here to stay.

For fans of… drop kicking friends through dry wall.

4. And Now I’m Just Gnashing My Teeth The Barbarians of California (Hardcore)

You know what was on my music BINGO card for 2024? Enjoying a lot of progressive music, hip-hop, hardcore, and an album or two of folk. You know what wasn’t on my BINGO card? Loving the hell out of a hardcore album released as a side project for the band AWOLNATION. Yeah, you read that right. The guys who brought us “Sail” (sorry to the band if you’re reading this, but that’s all I got) released an album of feral, ball-to-the-wall hardcore. And it’s really fucking good. 

What I respect most about this album is that it takes risks. One might expect a band known for releasing radio friendly alternative music to attempt a project like this and to play it safe, sticking to a sound that’s been tried and true in order to make a cross genre shift that is more inoffensive than it is bad. This album doesn’t feel inauthentic. It doesn’t feel like the band just woke up and thought “hardcore music is easy to make, so let’s do it.” Instead, And Now I’m Just Gnashing My Teeth, feels like a passion project, a true love letter to a genre that the band has wanted to create in and simply hasn’t before. This album doesn’t give a shit if you like it… and that’s precisely why it works. The riffs punch above their weight. The vocals bounce between absurd and manic, adding to the berserk energy that permeates every single song on this project. When I say there are no misses, I mean it. You’ve got “The Walrus” with its skate punk riffs, wakadoo vocal performance (seriously, that whistle breakdown), and a blistering thrash moment mid-song. You’ve got “Three Letters” which sounds like something dropped off a Tony Hawk Pro Skater soundtrack. You’ve got the epic closer “Far Out, Bro”, which puts the foot on the gas and doesn’t relent until disintegrating into madness. These guys set out to make a statement and, by God, they wrote it in bold, block letters. 

For fans of… Every Time I Die. 

3. Unyielding Night Assemble the Chariots (Symphonic Death Metal)

One of my favorite movies of all time is Mad Max: Fury Road. Critics of it will claim that it’s just one long chase scene, and they’re right, but it’s a really good chase scene. Without feeling the need to impede upon the stories pacing with backstory or flashbacks, it builds its characters and its world around it as it goes. The cinematography is incredible, the acting is frantic, and the characters imbed themselves into your hearts with their unique characteristics. 

I bring this up because Assemble the Chariot’s latest album, the opening chapter of a three part (?) concept is very much the same way. What it lacks in story (Aquilegia, the planet of light, is being attacked by the Reavers and they must fight to the death while their great leader escapes to preserve their way of life) it makes up for with fist-pumping riffs, battering drumming, guttural vocals, and smart touches of symphonic scoring. Breaking up the action with minor interludes (which serve to remind the reader of the stakes, the impending darkness, and the plans of the heroes), this album is one headbanger after another, shifting from stomping tracks like “Admorean Monolith”, hyperspeed thrashers like “As Was Seen By Augers,” and power metal-infused epics like “Galactic Order.” I’d really only recommend this for the metalheads reading this list, but if you are a metal fan, this has to be one you check out. Did this writer find goosebumps running up his arms as, *SPOILER ALERT* their defenses failing against the unrelenting onslaught of the invading Reavers, the Aquilegians let out their final war cry? You bet. But that’s what this album does. It engrosses you in its cosmic battle and makes it feel personal. It reminds you of your own struggles and the moments in your own life when you’ve felt hopeless, and it gives you the strength to stand up one last time. It reminds you that, even in the darkest moments, as the enemy stretches infinitely across the horizon, there are things worth fighting for… Things worth dying for. 

As the Protectors scream “We will not back down, until every last one of us dies.” As you drive to work, you might just find yourself doing the same. 

For fans of… The Battle of Helm’s Deep.

2. Life in the Wires Frost* (Progressive Rock)

It’s going to sound cheesy, but I genuinely believe in the power of music. I believe that it has the power to heal trauma, to bring people together, to inspire change, and to aid with rebellion. Regardless of whether it is familiar or challenging, radio-friendly or avant garde, I believe it’s important to regularly engage with music, to share it with loved ones, to explore new artists/albums, and to find comfort in old favorites. Especially in turmoil, never forget how important music is. 

This concept of the power of music is one explored on Frost*’s latest project, a mammoth hour and a half long concept album about a young man who, living in a dystopian society, hears a voice in an old transistor radio beckoning him to escape his mundane, controlled life. It’s a concept that, as a teacher, I see so many teenagers exploring on their own. So many of us, especially in our youths, used music as a way to define us. For some of us, it helped us fit in. For others, it was a way of shedding societal norms and pursuing our own identity. For the protagonist of this album, it leads to him being hunted by the government, finding his own voice, and becoming something powerful and new.

Crafting an album that sounds like the lovechild of Genesis, Pink Floyd, and modern progressive rock, Jem Godrey and company have constructed a project that feels as much an homage to the music that saved them (they’re not exactly spring chickens) as it is a message to future generations, a voice in the ancient radio, beckoning teenagers to explore a genre that has historically, and continually been about breaking the mold. 

One of the most impressive features of this album is that, despite its massive run time, it flies. This is largely due to the songwriting, which knows when to insert a smart chorus, when to expand a strong solo section, and when to let the album breathe. In part, I think the latter is one of the reasons for it feeling like this album doesn’t overstay its welcome. Using short interludes and saturating each song in a strong, nostalgic, melancholy atmosphere helps immerse the listener in the world of the characters. You feel the main character’s sadness as he’s trapped within an unloving home (“House of Winter”). You experience a rush that can only come from liberating oneself on the optimistic and powerful “Evaporator” (tell me this isn’t the perfect night highway driving song). You lose yourself in a sense of wonder as he transforms into something new (“Life in the Wires Pt. 2”). Regardless of whether you’re an progressive rock old head or a new convert, this album is a brilliant collection of songs that are both familiar and new. It’s an olive branch from those who found themselves in a specific group of artists and albums, to those who, perhaps feeling lost, rejected, or confused, are just about to.

Isn’t that what this list is all about?  

For fans of… Peter Gabriel.

1.I Haxa I Haxa (Dark Folk)

If you’ve been watching this list for the past five years that I’ve published it, you’ve probably noticed a trend with my number one album of the year. Often it is one that I spent a lot of time with but more importantly it is usually one that has the courage to do something massive. It’s an album that I couldn’t stop thinking or talking about. It’s one that, above everything else on the list, I already know the staying power of what I would consider to be a classic. And so this year, my favorite album is one of rich atmosphere, beautiful lyricism, and a phenomenal marketing campaign. It is one that captured my attention and my emotions, and unrelentingly retained them since it was teased back in February. 

When it was announced, it was stated that this project was to be a collection of four songs, released separately as four EPs (and subsequently broken up into four acts). A collaboration of singer-songwriter Rebecca Need-Menear and producer Peter Miles, these EPs were released with each season, thematically connecting a piece of a larger story to each season. I have to bring this up because we’ve seen artists playing around with how to release an album over the past couple years. Some have elected to release each song before the release, to help keep the album in conversation and streaming rotation. Other artists (like Melted Bodies earlier on this list) decided to release EPs to tease the song beforehand. While these ideas are frustrating but understandable given the attention spans of many in this day and age, they’ve enraged this writer who often waits for the whole album to be released in order to appreciate the music as one complete statement. But I Haxa’s release schedule makes sense and it helped establish the feeling of each album. Part One is haunted, dead, creeping in the shadows, seeking the light (early spring). Part Two is awake, lush, filled with breathing room (early summer). Part Three is alive, violent, angry, self-immolating (autumn) and Part Four… is beautiful, collapsing, revelatory (winter). This is one of the first unique release schedules that I’ve seen that adds to the listeners appreciation of the album while also providing space and time to process (and return to) each part. 

There are other attributes of the release cycle that I could get into, from the packaging to the video accompaniments of each part, but all of this would mean nothing if the music wasn’t absolutely phenomenal. The intentionality of this project isn’t just felt in the packaging and release, it’s deeply rooted within the very concept of this album. In lush soundscapes constructed with electronic, industrial, post rock, folk, and even breakbeat, images of death and rebirth are constructed in abstract poetry that unfurls and wilts repeatedly. It leaves you both satisfied and hungry for more, a cyclical experience that ends where it begins (much like the covers of each individual EP suggest). This is not an album that you’ll want to hear only once. This is one that will linger with you in the darkness long after the truly breathtaking closer “Circle” fades away (seriously, after listening to this whole album all the way through for the first time, I sat in silence, stared at nothing, and wiped away tears). It will summon you back to it, beckoning with darkened fingertips and lidless eyes. It will lift the Veil, and show you the darkness, the beautiful, the haunted, the holy, the Circle. Come. See. Become. Breathe. Destroy. Discard. Renew. Release. 

Repeat. 

For fans of… Nine Inch Nails. 

For the full first part video: