After a deluge of canceled or delayed tours, drive-in experiments, Bandcamp Fridays and bedroom livestreams, weâre finally here.
Yay?
Itâs hard to celebrate much of anything in 2020. But one encouraging sign from the music industry has been the number of artists innovating on the fly â figuring out ways to sustain their careers through the madness. And as fans, at least weâve had new albums to help us process our continuing semi-apocalypse.
Having (mercifully) reached the end of this awful year, we have even more perspective on the functionality of a great record. The 30 weâve assembled here have prompted us to dance, helped us grieve, made us laugh, or even just allowed us to escape into a transportive riff or soundscape. We assume they did the same for the artists themselves.
Let us remember to help us forget.
Â
30. Jessie Ware â Whatâs Your Pleasure?
Â
Â
This year was an exercise in being dressed up with nowhere to go, but Jessie Ware edged us toward the dance floor anyway with her mirrorball-blessed fourth album, Whatâs Your Pleasure? Having started her career in dance music, Ware swapping power ballads for beats isnât a totally unexpected side-step. But the â70s throwback suits her âqueen of the clubâ style, with Italo disco, Nile Rodgers-y bass lines and grand Minnie Riperton-styled sweeps all used in the name of a shimmying good time. Ware might be telling us to save a kiss â but in return, she managed to save the whole summer. â Laura Studarus
Â
29. My Dying Bride â The Ghost of Orion
Â
Â
Grief springs eternal for My Dying Bride â and itâs never been more personal than on The Ghost of Orion, which revolves around the cancer diagnosis of vocalist Aaron Stainthorpeâs daughter. Near-loss becomes as harrowing as outright loss: âTired of Tearsâ (which most directly addresses his daughterâs struggle) is Stainthrope growing weary of gloom and mourning, despite it being his very groupâs life force. Still, nothing on Orion sounds like giving up. âThe Old Earthâ both accepts unrelenting misery and yearns for a cataclysmic reckoning in which Andrew Craighanâs trademark drawn-out melodies and crushing death-doom dirges become antonyms for dissociation. â Andy OâConnor
Â
28. Margo Price – Thatâs How Rumors Get Started
Â
Â
Since her first album, 2016âs Midwest Farmerâs Daughter, Margo Price has often been positioned in outlaw country, flanked by comparisons to Bobbie Gentry and Loretta Lynn. But on her third LP, Thatâs How Rumors Get Started, Price veers closer to classic rock and away from the honky-tonk that once echoed through the Nashville songwriterâs music. While her debut was charged with drinking tropes and her sophomore effort (2017âs All American Made) steeped in political consciousness, Rumors focuses on the more vulnerable stories of touring life: being away from home, surviving relationships and the anxiety of stillness. Price is at her most stunning on the gospel-tinged confessional âPrisoner of the Highway,â in which she reflects on the cost of being an artist on the road while in love and starting a family. The same goes for power ballad âIâd Die For You,â where she parallels a soaring Stevie Nicks. A little bit of Nashville and Southern rock seems to have been good for her soul. â Ilana Kaplan
Â
27. Soccer Mommy â color theory
Â
Â
color theory feels like a pre-pandemic fever dream. Itâs peaceful, unhurried, and concerned only with internal turmoil. On the fluttering âbloodstream,â Sophie Allison grapples with an inexplicable inability to remain happy. âroyal screw upâ shines a light on her own insecurities, while also making revelations. ââCause you are a question that I thought I could solve,â she sings. âBut you donât need solving â youâre just not what I want.â Allison showed a rare level of vulnerability and reflection on her 2018 debut, Clean, but color theory goes even deeper. â Danielle Chelosky
Â
26. Nothing â The Great Dismal
Â
Â
The Philadelphia shoegaze quartet followed their quietly acclaimed 2018 LP, Dance on the Blacktop, with the colossal The Great Dismal â bringing in new members, conjuring My Bloody Valentine, delving deeper into their gritty and eccentric sides, and exploring what it means to be human. The guitars on âApril Ha Haâ are abrasive and hypnotic, hurtling the listener into darkness. Most of the lyrics are unintelligible, except for when Domenic Palermo defeatedly sings, âIsnât it strange / Watching people / Try and outrun rain?â â D.C.
Â
25. The Lemon Twigs – Songs For The General Public
Â
Â
Long Island siblings Brian and Michael DâAddario were born in the late â90s but have mastered the ornate, melodic sound of â70s rock so well that theyâve earned the approval of Todd Rundgren and Elton John. On their third album for 4AD, the brothers drop their concept album ambitions to earnestly ponder human relationships on songs like âWhy Do Lovers Own Each Other?â and âNo One Holds You (Closer Than The One You Havenât Met).â Thereâs always a playful spirit to the performances, particularly when Michaelâs voice suddenly flips from Iggy Pop swagger to a Bob Dylan wheeze in the middle of a verse. â Al Shipley
Â
24. Khruangbin â Mordechai
Â
Â
Ascendant Houston psych-funk trio Khruangbin finally spoke up on Mordechai, their most lyrically-driven LP yet. Like many of the bandâs buzzy, globetrotting grooves, some new lines may come off as opaque â with bassist Laura Lee using multiple languages (including Turkish, Japanese and Portuguese) on the disco winner âTime (You and I)â or abstract spoken verses and a French-language chorus on the seductive âConnaissais de Face.â Other messages are simpler, as âYouâre not crazyâ is repeated no less than 14 times on the melty âIf There Is No Question.â The spacious album, recorded in a barn in the bandâs native city, draws from their celebrated melting pot of influences â like âSpanish discoâ and âIsraeli, Yemenite jamsâ â as much as indie-rock and soul. â Bobby Olivier
Â
23. Poppy â I Disagree
Â
Â
Few artists could convincingly cover Korn and Carly Rae Jepsen in the same set, and next to zero can conjure both of those acts within a single song. Then again, thatâs just one reason why Poppy may very well be a computer. Her gloriously disorienting third LP takes this dichotomy to an extreme, breezing through disparate sounds with the ease of scrolling a news feed. âConcreteâ moves from Pet Sounds harmonies to cutesy teen pop choruses to djent-y guitars, while on âI Disagree,â she adopts a clipped trap triplet flow before a chorus that nods to vintage Evanescence. âBurn it to the ground,â she sings. âWeâll be safe and sound / When it all burns down.â Letâs assume sheâs talking about the concept of genre. â Ryan Reed
Â
22. Beabadoobee â Fake It Flowers
Â
Â
Beabadoobee emerged in 2017 with her first single, âCoffeeâ (which later went viral on TikTok early this year), but a better intro to her music was 2019âs âI Wish I Was Stephen Malkmus,â an ode to the influence of Pavement. The songwriterâs debut LP, Fake It Flowers, takes on â90s nostalgia, offering hints of Lush, Elliott Smith, Veruca Salt, Sonic Youth andâŠPavement. But Bea Kristi still makes the record feel innately hers, penning deeply personal lyrics about mental health struggles, difficult past relationships and finding love with her longtime boyfriend. â Tatiana Tenreyro
Â
21. The Flaming Lips â American Head
Â
Â
The Flaming Lips love grand concepts. This time, Wayne Coyne and company explored something a little more conventional than their past mystical journeys: Tom Petty and Mudcrutchâs stop in Tulsa in the 1970s. Coyne tried to answer the what-ifs surrounding that visit, delving deep into imagined characters and druggy nostalgia. The imaginative innocence of âDinosaur on the Mountainâ melds with the acid trip dreaminess of âFlowers of Neptune 6â and the Beatles-esque psych ballad âMother Please Donât Be Sad,â fitting together like the kind of Lips puzzle only they can assemble.  â Daniel Kohn
Â
20. Future Islands – As Long as You Are
Â
Â
No oneâs ever accused Samuel T. Herring of being unfeeling, and the Future Islands frontman lets his emotions fly on the bandâs sixth LP. He blends his bleeding-heart baritone with delicate synth washes and New Order-worthy bass lines, compelling us with sheer charisma to consider the weight of each word as he delves into heady topics like body dysmorphia, romantic refuse and self-worth. âDo you hate yourself? / Break yourself? / Mistake yourself for the things that they say?â he asks frantically on âWaking.â Without any easy answers, weâre left with the frenetic thrill of feeling it all. â L.S.
Â
19. Thundercat â It Is What It Is
Â
Â
L.A.âs bassist extraordinaire has done it all â hardcore, yacht rock, jazz, soul, you name it. With It Is What It is, he exceeded his lofty standards and made his best album yet. Following the 2018 death of his close friend Mac Miller, Stephen Bruner channeled grief into his music. But the record is also reliably playful. Itâs as much fun hearing him sing about the powers of headgear on âDragonball Duragâ as it is watching him try to charm the pants off folks in the video. He shows his brilliance on âHow Swayâ and once again proves his funkiness on the star-studded âBlack Qualls.â As usual, Bruner demonstrates why heâs one of our generationâs most versatile musicians â fearless and unafraid to take a groove to a different time and place. â D.K.
Â
18. 21 Savage & Metro Boomin â Savage Mode II
Â
Â
Blockbuster movie sequels typically raise the stakes to go bigger than the original, and 21 Savage & Metro Boominâs Savage Mode II adheres to the unwritten sequel rule. Pen & Pixel album art and a robust merch line accompanied the album narrated by Morgan Freeman (who, among other things, defines âsavageâ). Metro Boominâs production is grander and more diverse while still retaining his ominous thump. 21 Savage matches Boomin by subtly experimenting with his own delivery â making his menacing, mid-pitched drawl looser and occasionally more melodic. Unlike sequels that double down on the originalâs tropes, Savage Mode II expands its scope. Dead bodies are largely swapped out for more bands and women, as homicides are in the rearview. Now a âfull-time rapperâ (âGlock in My Lapâ), 21 balances the felonious with the luxurious. Savage Mode II is the aural equivalent of watching black Air Forces step out of a Wraith. The ad-libs remain the same, but 21 is a different savage. â Max Bell
Â
17. Sufjan Stevens â The Ascension Â
Â
Â
âDonât do to me what you did to America,â Sufjan Stevens croons on the 12-minute epic âAmerica.â And the broader mood of his eighth solo LP, The Ascension, is just as overcast â full of poetic despair set against the experimental, electronic beats and wispy melodies that have defined much of Stevensâ music. That balance of beauty and bleakness also anchors another centerpiece, the crunchy âDeath Starâ where Stevens unnervingly chants âDeath star into space / What you call the human race / Expedite the judgment day.â Earlier in 2020, Stevens also collaborated with his stepfather Lowell Brams for the New Age album Aporia. If the Oscar nominee has demonstrated anything in the last 20 years, itâs range. â Stephanie Mendez
Â
16. Freddie Gibbs & Alchemist â Alfredo
Â
Â
Freddie Gibbs and Alchemist approach their art like athletes, forever strengthening muscle and refining their respective forms. The mafia-themed Alfredo isnât a radical departure from anything either has done before. But the Grammy-nominated album is the greatest distillation to date of these two singular talents, with their collaboration enhancing one anotherâs strengths. After a decade-plus in the game, Gibbs still finds inventive ways to frame moving weight and riding on his enemies. Alchemist supplies sparse, loop-driven suites that are alternately grimy and regal, the ominous score to the dope deals or the relaxed, elegant soundtrack to the champagne-stocked yacht cruises those transactions afforded. Gibbs floats over every Alchemist beat, his versatility unrivaled as he jumps from double to triple time flows, from brute force to melodic finesse. The ingredients of Alfredo are familiar, but theyâve never been as potent or well-matched. â M.B.
Â
15. The Soft Pink Truth â Shall We Go On Sinning So That Grace May Increase?
Â
Â
The gushing minimalism of Steve Reich, the dreamy jazz-fusion of â70s ECM artists, the ambient-adjacent pulse of the Fieldâs From Here We Go Sublime â these seem like possible ingredients melted down and absorbed into the masterful new work from the Soft Pink Truth, a.k.a. Drew Daniel, best known as half of the electronic duo Matmos. The album emerged out of Danielâs anger with the Trump presidency and his desire to avoid creating ââangry white guyâ music in a purely reactive mode.â What he created instead is a luxuriant deep house odyssey, percolating and humming with drones, bells, murmuring voices, twinkling piano and even some live saxophone. The beautiful album brought endless moments of quiet bliss during this relentlessly chaotic year. Itâs best listened to on vinyl or iTunes, as the album is presented as one continuous piece of music, so ads or artificial track breaks can kill the vibe. – Zach Schonfeld
Â
14. Dua Lipa â Future Nostalgia
Â
Â
âDisco revivalâ is hardly a novel concept in pop music, but it takes a certain kind of star to make it feel fresh again. Enter Dua Lipa, who (much like Madonna and Kylie Minogue) flipped the genre on its head with her sophomore album, Future Nostalgia. Calling on heavyweights like industry favorite Jeff Bhasker and mega-producer Stuart Price, Lipa found escapism through dance-friendly jams. âLevitatingâ is a bubblegum-sweet joyride; âPhysicalâ resurrects Olivia Newton-Johnâs â80s jazzercise; and âDonât Start Nowâ is retro-pop at its finest. âMaybe music is kind of what we need,â Lipa said on Miley Cyrusâ Bright Minded Instagram Live series back in March. âAnd itâs good to just get people to dance and have fun.â â Bianca Gracie
Â
13. Ka â Descendants of Cain
Â
Â
Brooklyn firefighter/rapper Ka dispenses grizzled advice like a clever veteran who never needs to raise his voice to earn attention. On Descendants of Cain, his storytelling remains gruff and rich with detail, his matter-of-fact lyricism full of unflinching wisdom (âNever marinate on beef you donât plan on finishing,â he growls on âPatron Saintsâ) and his grainy production more complex than ever. Plus, itâs likely the only 2020 rap album that builds a haunting loop around a sample from the â70s Swedish prog-rock band Zamla Mammaz Manna. Though he was a member of the New York hip-hop group Natural Elements in the â90s, Ka found solo success relatively late in life. At 48, heâs never sounded less interested in chasing rap trends or compromising his vision, and Descendants of Cain is all the better for it. – Z.S.
Â
12. Deftones â Ohms
Â
Â
âI finally achieve balance,â Chino Moreno half-sings/half-screams on âGenesis,â a pummeling highlight from Deftonesâ ninth album. In essence, itâs been the bandâs ultimate challenge for decades: seamlessly melding their arty atmospherics and eight-string metal intensity. Theyâve been on a creative hot streak coming off of 2012âs Koi No Yokan and 2016âs Gore, but neither of those LPs achieve the holistic balance of Ohms. With more space for Frank Delgadoâs shadowy synths and Sergio Vegaâs melodic bass, the bandâs dynamic shifts have never been more satisfying â like on âPompeji,â where clean guitars and crooning give way to a flood of distortion. â R.R.
Â
11. Hayley Williams â Petals for Armor
Â
Â
Paramoreâs Hayley Williams has been inching toward a solo career for nearly a decade. Her debut, Petals for Armor â produced and largely co-written by her longtime Paramore bandmate Taylor York â is a fairly stark departure from her bandâs radio-friendly rock and emo roots, boasting dance-friendly synth lines, strings and electronics behind Williamsâ more controlled voice. Those expecting another Paramore album were thrown for a loop â Petals for Armor isnât Riot! (or even After Laughter) all over again. But this complex art-pop style, exemplified by lead single âSimmer,â is an intriguing step in a new direction. â Josh Chesler
Â
10. Fleet Foxes â Shore
Â
Â
As a pandemic-riddled summer ushered in an even longer pandemic-riddled autumn, at least we had the bucolic sounds of Fleet Foxes to provide some comfort. Robin Pecknold surprise-released the sweeping Shore as the seasons turned, with his music at its most assured and his lyrics touching a newfound optimism. Recorded on both sides of the pandemic, the groupâs layered fourth record offers the warmth of a tweed sweater â best exemplified by âCan I Believe You,â the delicate âYoung Manâs Gameâ and the bittersweet tribute to Richard Swift, David Berman and others on âSunblind.â In a year thatâs felt like a long winter, Shore has brought a meditative sense of acceptance. â D.K.
Â
9. Waxahatchee â Saint Cloud
Â
Â
If there was ever a year to wade into an Alabama creek, stare at the sun and figure out how the hell youâre going to keep on keepinâ on, it was 2020. Just be sure to leave Waxahatcheeâs Saint Cloud playing from the bank. Katie Crutchfield, now 10 years removed from her place in indie-punk cult favorite P.S. Eliot, has developed her solo persona into a captivating and deeply emotive sad-song dynamo. The singer lands more sure-footed than ever with her fifth solo album. A jangly and pensive journey down old southern roads, it finds the recently-sober Crutchfield considering past mistakes and paths toward healing. More laid back than its predecessor (the more rock-focused Out in the Storm)Â Crutchfieldâs best album yet reminds us to accept imperfection and find the joy in our search for whatever comes next. â B.O.
Â
8. Tame Impala â The Slow Rush
Â
Â
Following 2015âs Currents, Tame Impalaâs Kevin Parker became an in-demand artist throughout the industry â countless festival gigs, teaming with Lady Gaga and Travis Scott, lending Rihanna an album cut. Five years later, naming his follow-up The Slow Rush couldnât be anything but a cheeky wink. Released on Valentineâs Day, the album builds upon the artistâs knack for perfectly fusing prog-rock and psychedelic pop. The gauzy synths of âBorderlineâ attempt to hide loneliness, and âBreathe Deeperâ is a funkified sigh of relief. Reflective closer âOne More Hourâ perfectly caps the album, drifting listeners through various stages of Parkerâs journey of time and love. Letâs just hope he doesnât leave us waiting another five years for the next chapter. â B.G.
Â
7. Phoebe Bridgers – Punisher
Â
Â
If 2020 had a wry best friend, itâs Phoebe Bridgers, whose second album tackles nothing less than the idea of life after death, hero worship and resting bitch face â only to reveal on the horn-accented single âKyotoâ that, yes, sheâs also a liar. Although hyper-specific to its creator (see: lyrics about hopping the fence at the Huntington Gardens, eating saltines on the floor, and hating on Eric Clapton), Punisher also doubles as the folk-fueled battle cry of a generation still trying to find meaning in the mess. If that means facing the apocalypse, as Bridgers does over the cacophonous apex of closing track âI Know the End,â rest assured that thereâs no artist better suited to burn it down and start again. – L.S.
Â
6. Bad Bunny â YHLQMDLG
Â
Â
After securing his place in reggaetĂłn, Bad Bunny shifted the goalpost to a more global outlook with his second solo album, YHLQMDLG (which stands for âYo Hago Lo Que Me Da La Ganaâ and translates as âI Do Whatever I Wantâ). The record has made history commercially as the first all-Spanish-language album to reach No. 2 on the Billboard 200, but itâs also a creative leap for reggaetĂłn itself. Bad Bunny turns bossa-nova classic âThe Girl From Ipanemaâ into â90s Nintendo trap; blasts eardrums with the rock ending of âHablamos Mañana;â gets dirty with Jowell & Randy and Ăengo Flow on sonic mash-up âSafaera;â and dresses up in drag for womenâs autonomy in the âYo Perreo Solaâ video. Bunny has surely lived up to the album title, particularly since heâs already released two more albums since YHLQMDLG. This is El Conejo Maloâs world domination â and now weâve had front-row seats. â B.G.
Â
5. Caribou â Suddenly
Â
Â
Our Love was Caribouâs most commercially successful album to date, even landing a Grammy nomination. But instead of hurrying to follow it up, Dan Snaith spent years reveling in his dance-y alter ego, Daphni and being a parent to his two young daughters. With Suddenly, the Canadian composer/DJ finally emerged with what may be the warmest, most empathetic electronic album of 2020. Snaith flirts with old-school hip-hop breakbeats on âHomeâ and dusty jazz loops on âLimeâ (digging up some wonderfully rare soul samples along the way), but he never strays too far from the soulful, house-inspired pop songcraft heâs mastered on these past two albums. – Z.S.
Â
4. Perfume Genius â Set My Heart on Fire Immediately
Â
Â
On the early lo-fi Perfume Genius recordings, you can hear the grand ambition of Mike Hadreas yearning to break through the scratchy fidelity. Itâs been a gradual evolution with each successive project inching him closer to the kaleidoscopic sprawl of Set My Heart on Fire Immediately, his fifth and most expansive LP. Aided by producer Blake Mills and a crew of A-list session pros (including bassist Pino Palladino and drummer Jim Keltner), he commands every one of the numerous styles he attempts. âDescribeâ is fuzzy dream-pop country, while âOn the Floorâ is funk-washed grind, complete with organ notes straight out of the Maytals. â R.R.
Â
3. Run the Jewels â RTJ4
Â
Â
In late May, the U.S. faced a social and cultural reckoning that had been building for years. Many songs were played at the protests, but none summed up that time (and 2020 as a whole) quite like RTJ4. The albumâs fiery message, bombastic beats and sharp humor offered both a musical reprieve and the soundtrack for a moment that needed one. âOoh La Laâ and its accompanying video showcased Killer Mike and El-Pâs fun side, whereas âJU$Tâ battled injustice. Who else has the strength to enlist Josh Homme and Mavis Staples on the same album, much less the same song (âPulling the Pinâ)? That could also be said for dusting off previous collaborator and notorious recluse Zack de la Rocha. When the world needed something, anything, Run the Jewels came through with their blazing fourth album. It was more than worth the four-year wait, offering a reason to believe in a year where there werenât many options. â D.K.
Â
2. Bartees Strange â Live Forever
Â
Â
Bartees Strange finally broke through, earning universal acclaim in a terrible year where artists struggled more than ever. But the response to Live Forever was well-earned, following years of grinding and sonic experimentation. The album opens with the atmospheric âJealousy,â introducing the emotional world these songs inhabit. From there, it plays with catchy hip-hop on âBoomer,â brassy indie-rock on âIn a Cabâ and intimate folk on âFarâ â all proving that Bartees is one of our most versatile emerging artists. â D.C.
Â
1. Fiona Apple â Fetch the Bolt Cutters
Â
The anxiety of anticipation for Fiona Appleâs new album was relieved within its first three minutes and 58 seconds. Fetch the Bolt Cutters arrived eight years after its predecessor, The Idler WheelâŠ, but opener âI Want You To Love Meâ maintained her signature idiosyncrasies, vulnerability and wit â all qualities that bloom further as the record continues. Every moment is memorable, from the fun piano and hopeful lyricism on âShameikaâ to the playful vocals and clever wordplay on âRack of His.â Though the album easily couldâve gotten lost amid pandemic madness, fans clung to it throughout quarantine. Nothing couldâve swept this monumental release under the rug. Appleâs lighthearted yet confrontational songs made a terrible year a little easier to process. â D.C.