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The Sounding Board

Rank and file: Here's how the 2025 music reviewed in this column stacks up

A weekly column where New Music Tuesdays live on. Conversation is encouraged in the comments.

Every Tuesday, the Sounding Board is a space for a short-ish review of a recent-ish release and conversations about new-to-you music. I’ll get things started with a write-up about a newer, likely under-heard album, and invite you to share your music musings in the comments. I’m taking a break from the typical format for a mid-year recap and a quick look ahead.

When I think of 2025’s music landscape, I think of former President George Herbert Walker Bush. Like too many of my thoughts, it’s caused by a classic episode of The Simpsons.

In the Season 7 episode, “Two Bad Neighbors,” Bush (voiced by series regular Harry Shearer) uses a significant chunk of his post-presidential free time to complete his memoirs. After typing a hefty tome, he offers the even-keeled appraisal, “Hmm… good memoirs. Good, not great.” That absurdly milquetoast-but-complimentary reaction is still rattling around my head decades later, and it captures how I feel about the music of 2025 so far.

A lot of albums I like and admire have been released this year. There’s even been a couple of LPs I think will make my personal top 10 at the end of the year. However, there haven’t been many albums that have totally swept me off my feet, and looking at the release calendar for the rest of the year, I suspect that some of 2025’s best releases are ahead of us. However, there truly has been a lot to like, and I’ve written about a bunch of that likeable music in this space. That makes sense, because as a rule, if I write about an album for the Sounding Board, it’s because I expected to like an album, and I found myself with enough thoughts to sustain a short column. My general feeling is that the internet has hit its quota for snark and pans, and no one’s making me do this, so I might as well spend my time with music that brings me joy and sustains analysis.

In the interest of taking time to appreciate this year’s ample but relatively modest pleasures and to mark the midway point of the year, I decided to rank the 26 albums I’ve written about for the Sounding Board in 2025. I’ve included an excerpt from each column to provide a little context for each LP or EP. This isn’t a full-on clip show, though. I’ll also run through a few worthwhile albums that I didn’t cover here but was charmed by and spotlight some looming releases I expect to elevate this year’s cohort of music.

26. The Amazons- 21st Century Fiction

What I wrote: That synchronization between form and lyrical motif is a nice touch and speaks to an admirable level of thought and intentionality that went into the making of 21st Century Fiction. It’s an album that’s both professionally made and conceptually cogent. If that sounds like faint praise, it sure is. That’s more or less what 21st Century Fiction deserves. It’s not the worst thing ever. It takes aim at a specific sound, which took some degree of ambition, but it’s tough to hype up an LP that sounds like Imagine Dragons covering the perfectly cromulent blues-rock supergroup the Dead Weather.

25. Gumshoes- Bugs Forever

What I wrote: As Bugs Forever‘s title suggests, there’s an entomic slant to things, and each of its dozen songs assumes the perspective of a different bug. It’s an odd, and per Gumshoes “unbearably whimsical” idea on paper, but it makes some sense. Swarms are shorthand for pestilence and doom; in life, and especially in death, a variety of bugs feed on us; and famously cockroaches are destined to outlive humanity. So why not mix a little Jonathan Richman with Hieronymus Bosch? The end result is basically an album where every song is “Doctor Worm” by They Might Be Giants and also about the end of the world.

24. Ringo Starr- Look Up

What I wrote: Ringo Starr’s Look Up is a much better idea than an album.

That’s mostly because it’s such a stellar concept on paper: Take the Beatle most enamored of Country and Western music, team him up with some of the most virtuosic artists making roots music (plus a legendary producer) and give the then-84 year old a chance to record his late-life musings. It’s wonderful table setting that could have served up a revelatory and profound career capstone like the end-of-the-road albums from Leonard Cohen, Johnny Cash and David Bowie. Alas, the near bottomless reservoirs of money and cachet available to the legend didn’t produce his own Black Starr. Instead, they were used to create something like a sequel to Beaucoup of Blues. But that’s still a pretty fun album.

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23. FACS- Wish Defense

What I wrote: The latest LP from Chicago art-rockers, FACS,1 was the last album that the late, great and complicated Steve Albini engineered before his abrupt death in May 2024 at the age of 61. Albini spent two days in early May working on the album with the veteran three-piece band, and Sanford Parker, a Chicago-based musician and producer, consulted Albini’s notes while finishing recording the album with the trio. Curious listeners who check out Wish Defense because of its unasked-for and unexpected distinction will find a lot to like in the album. FACS — Noah Leger (drums), Jonathan van Herik (bass) and Brian Case (guitar / vocals) — pack a lot of winsome moody weirdness into the album’s seven songs that make for worthwhile and interesting listen.

22. Circa Waves- Death & Love, Pt. 1.

What I wrote: While a British Invasion aftershock seems incredibly unlikely in 2025, Death & Love, Pt. 1, released Jan. 31 via Lower Third Records/PIA, makes a strong case that guitar-driven pop should still cause a transatlantic buzz. On the strength of big hooks and some sounds nicked from multiple waves of cool bands from both sides of the pond, Circa Waves crafted a tight, bright LP that often successfully channels the emotional grandeur hinted at in its title.

21. Mamalarky- Hex Key

What I wrote: Hex Key was produced and engineered by singer-guitarist Livvy Bennett and keyboardist Michael B. Hunter, and Hunter also mixed the album. Keeping that much of the production in-house seems to have allowed the band to indulge some of its weirder impulses. “Take Me,” for example, is 90% the sort of striding piano-driven song that populated mid-aughts VH1, and 10% oddball whipsaw warbles and microwave auditory weirdness. The album’s title track is two minutes of swirling neo-psychedelia that skirts the edges of a bad trip. “Blush” is built around pleasantly jazzy keys that are pushed, prodded and processed until they sound like a mix between an Emerson, Lake & Palmer deep cut and a storm warning system.

20. Casey Smith Project- Just Like You Wanted It

What I wrote: Listeners drawn toward hookier, brasher songs may get a little lost in the album’s deliberate pace, but the variety of sounds Just Like You Wanted It tosses out means that it’s never boring. While the old adage about judging a book by its cover is generally true, Just Like You Wanted It‘s Maisie Kane-made album art depicting a retro gas pump and psychedelically proportioned mushrooms will put your head in the right space.

19. Sunflower Bean- Mortal Primetime

What I wrote: The trio’s fourth album, is nothing more or less than 10 well-crafted conventional indie rock songs featuring exceptional instrumentation and striking vocals.1 It’s likeable front-to-back and worth working into even a recently crowded listening rotation. That’s an impressive bit of alchemy because the types of adult-oriented rock that provide the most obvious points of reference for Mortal Primetime don’t necessarily scream, “must listen.” Depending on the song, listeners can expect to encounter ultra-slick hair metal guitar, somber string accents that used to class up songs like “Iris” by the Goo Goo Dolls, the Paisley Underground’s psychedelia-lite, or what sounds like a mid-’80s Stevie Nicks song. There’s also a full-fledged shoegaze track that brings the album to a somnolent close, but its glorious anxiety-obliviating buzz is a one-off.

18. Yaya Bey- Do It Afraid

What I wrote: On the latest LP from the Queens singer-songwriter-rapper, her voice is warm, musical and immediate whether she’s singing or weaving her way through impressive double time. It’s rapping at the volume of a murmur but enunciated clearly enough for bilabial pops and alveolar clicks to sound off in your headphones. It’s both technically impressive and a great delivery method for Yaya Bey’s lyrics, which are emotive, thoughtful and clever whether they’re expressing rage, disappointment or desire; whether they’re focused inward or lost in big-picture thought.

17. Tune-Yards- Better Dreaming

What I wrote: Tune-Yards have become increasingly in touch with humanity and their fit within its teeming, unruly collective over the better part of two decades. Socially conscious concepts further permeated Tune-Yards’ body of work, which includes a dance album that spends much of its runtime grappling with identity and reconciling Garbus’ personal politics with the success she’s found as a white woman making music deeply indebted to artists of color. It’s not just perspective that’s expanded for Tune-Yards. By album No. 2, a project that started as an aggressively lo-fi Garbus solo effort grew to formally include bassist Nate Brenner. Garbus and Brenner have forged a partnership in music and life. Their young child can be heard on several songs on Better Dreaming, Tune-Yards’ fine sixth album. It’s just one of the ways the Oakland duo’s extensive history and progressive growth are on display. 

16. The Pains of Being Pure at Heart- Perfect Right Now: A Slumberland Collection 2008-2010

What I wrote: Perfect Right Now combines b-sides from 7-inch singles that accompanied the Pains of Being Pure At Heart’s self-titled debut, tracks from the Higher Than The Stars EP and 2010 single, “Say No To Love,” into a supremely enjoyable 10-song package. A decade and a half of distance has done nothing to dull the charms of these early the Pains of Being Pure At Heart songs. They remain incredibly tight tunes to sway your upper torso to in the vein of classic twee bands like the Field Mice, Belle and Sebastian, Talulah Gosh, the Vaselines, and all the others who helped inspire Nirvana’s softer side.

15. Say Sue Me- Time is Not Yours

What I wrote: On Say Sue Me’s new five-song EP, the Busan-based dream poppers hone in on an element of tuneful, shoegaze noise that’s long been at least a minor presence on their past efforts and make it the EP’s defining quality. It’s a helluva way for the band to clear its throat after not releasing anything more substantial than a single since 2022’s deeply enjoyable, The Last Thing Left.

14. Delights- If Heaven Looks a Little Like This

What I wrote: Every song on If Heaven Looks a Little Like This dares listeners to swim Scrooge McDuck-style through an embarrassment of ebullient ear candy or else drown beneath its stockpile of slick sounds.Generally, these are borrowed baubles that owe something to a bygone era of indie rock. Huge harmonies, just-so jangle, a willingness to build around a catchy synth line, dance-y polyrhythms and Adam Maxwell’s emotive lead vocals all echo past Manchester music glories as well as dance rock’s mid-aughts glory days.1 While these influences are readily apparent, Delights avoid falling into the the tacky, hacky pitfall that snagged the likes of The Dare or Greta Van Fleet. That’s because the band is canny, confident and competent enough to mix-and-match elements from its predecessors and make something distinct with them.

13. Prism Shores- Out from Underneath

What I Wrote: Prism Shores’ second album is 32 punchy minutes of tunes that sound like they were unearthed from some left-of-the-dial campus station’s vault after laying dormant for the past 35 years. Every charm associated with a strain of late ’80s college rock is present on Out From Underneath. Tasteful, gentle reverb is omnipresent, guitars alternate from IRS-era REM jangle to Kevin Shieldsian serrated swoon and a couple songs boast guy-girl duet vocals to great effect.

12. Cloakroom- Last Leg of the Human Table

What I wrote: Last Leg of the Human Table‘s combination of melodious guitar squall and sing-song, sometimes lightly autotuned, vocals are too interesting to be mere background noise. Still, the warm drone of its Weezer-meets-Galaxie 500 sound has a comfortable, nearly narcotic feeling that can make it the equivalent of an auditory weighted blanket.2 It’s cozy, and the world is better for its existence, but it takes a smidge of mindfulness to remain fully aware and appreciative of its heaviness. And there is plenty of heavy guitar sound to go around.

11. U.S. Girls- Scratch It

What I wrote: Scratch It is a considerable departure form the out-there pop of past U.S. Girls releases. Instead, the album sounds like a minor, slightly cloudy gem cut in a bygone era when complicated emotions and steel twang were a sign of serious songwriting chops and could even net a radio hit. It’s an earthy, organic and Americana-tinged album that feels lived in and fully fleshed out thanks to a cohesive soundscape seemingly on loan from Laurel Canyon and impressive songwriting.

10. The Loft- Everything Changes Everything Stays the Same

What I wrote: Everything Changes Everything Stays the Same consists of 10 timeless guitar-driven pop songs that would make for a helluva debut LP in any year. They would have sounded great in 1985, and they sound improbably fresh approximately four decades later. That’s partially due to melodies that feel instantly comfortable without being contrived. There’s plenty of songs about getting wasted and wasting time, but none of them combine bleakly observational lyrics, bright lead guitar, and a catchy chorus quite like de facto title track “Ten Years.” Its lyrics about squandered decades also carry extra weight with knowledge that Peter Astor could be singing from credible experience.

9. Dunes- Land of the Blind

What I wrote: Dunes traffics in the sort of unapologetically hard-nosed alternative rock that ruled shit-kicking corners of the airwaves during the 20th century’s death rattle. Think back to when a song like “Would?” by Alice in Chains, “Dead and Bloated” by Stone Temple Pilots or “Slaves & Bulldozers” by Soundgarden could get occasional radio play, or even become outright hits. Then, sprinkle in a bit of Kyuss-style stoner-rock stomp. Imagine what that combination sounds like. The desert sand-blasted kaiju rumble you just conjured in your mind’s ears is pretty much sound that Dunes are going for, and their latest album, Land of the Blind, is an excellent example of the form.

8. Home Is Where- Hunting Season

What I wrote: Each of the 13 songs on Home Is Where’s third album ostensibly captures the dying thoughts of an Elvis impersonator who suffered fatal injuries in a grisly car wreck. To make it more bizarre and macabre, none of these songs are from the point of view of the same ill-fated impersonator, but they all stem from the same King-sized car wreck. Yes, Hunting Season‘s central conceit is an ultra-improbable hunk a hunk of burning humanity that claims the lives of a baker’s dozen of ersatz Elvi. It’s grotesque, absurd, shows poor taste in at least two ways, and it earns the emo erstwhile Floridians who committed to the bit a standing ovation from me.

7. Courting- Lust for Life, Or: How To Thread The Needle And Come Out The Other Side To Tell The Story

What I wrote: Courting seem to have assembled an album from the best bits of every song you remember from the early-to-mid-’00s, irrespective of genre. Elements of dance-punk, Auto-Tuned crooning, smooth, early-Maroon-5-style adult contemporary, moody instrumentals, and even electronica are present on the album.

These disparate sounds aren’t blended so much as stitched together Frankenstein-style. Despite the sometimes audible seams connecting the upcycled pieces, they still work well together. 

6. Lifeguard- Ripped and Torn

What I wrote: The Chicago trio’s first LP is a 12-song blitz of lo-fi guitar music that doles out warm-toned buzz and hooks in a ratio that slightly favors the feedback. Their sonic palette draws from the same crumpled box of slightly melted crayons that Cloud NothingsSmith Westerns and No Age all used to messily color in their noise-filled early works. It is extremely charming to hear Lifeguard crack open that carton, grab some squishy wax with a peeled label and set to work on their own scruffy art.

5. Yeule- Evangelic Girl is a Gun

What I wrote: Evangelic Girl is a Gun blends hypnagogic singing; poetic, sometimes profane, lyrics; and music that heavily incorporates elements of ’90s alternative music and both hip- and trip-hop. It’s a sound that echoes the past without being beholden to it and that stays true to the distortion-heavy consistently off-kilter sound that’s all yeule’s. It’s music that is sometimes exuberantly bright and other times placidly staid, but the first impression is never the full story. Weird electronic squelches, abrasive feedback, hissing static, corrosive guitar and chopped-up percussion sounds have a habit of popping up in unexpected places. If the Cardigans ever made a song that featured a brief bridge sung by Poo-Chi, the toy robot dog from the early ’00s, it would sound a lot like “Eko.” Album-opener “Tequila Coma” sounds like it could have been on Fiona Apple’s Tidal, if it wasn’t for a stuttering back beat and the presence of serrated guitar squeal in the place where an unfortunate snake charming outro would have appeared 30 years ago.

4. The Bug Club- Very Human Feature

What I wrote: The Bug Club occupy a wordy, twee, somewhat abrasive and overtly British sonic niche that could make their fourth LP, Very Human Features, a torturous listen for certain people. However, for the folks who relish a blend of verbose wordplay and nihilistic detachment in lyrics and are always down for melody rendered through adorkable cacophony, Very Human Features is one of the year’s most singularly fun listens

3. Cheekface- Middle Spoon

What I wrote: If the music isn’t solid, the jokes don’t land, and things fall on the wrong side of the novelty song divide. Whether the people who should be listening have heard, Cheekface have proven they can bring the laughs and the tunes to keep company with cult heroes.

2. Valerie June- Owls, Omens, and Oracles

What I wrote: You can’t make a no-skips, head-spinning, genre-hopping contender for album of the year if you don’t have a solid first song. Valerie June has delivered just such an album with Owls, Omens, and Oracles, and it comes complete with an incandescent beam that radiates pure bliss in omnidirectional honey-colored waves for its side one, track one…As alluded to some 470 words ago, “Joy Joy” is not the only song on Owls, Omens, and Oracles. There’s 14 other tracks on the album, and all of them are at least worth hearing with most being either good or great. Like the album’s lead single, they employ sounds from the past, blend styles and genres, and get a major shot in the arm from June’s voice.

  1. Weatherday- Hornet Disaster

What I wrote: The album as a whole radiates the the sort of assaultive, welt-inducing energy that could conceivably come from a hornet disaster.4 The second full-length album by Swedish artist Sputnik using the Weatherday alias is a 16-song swarm of buzzing, stinging, often-angry emo-adjacent noise pop. It’s not a smooth listen, but for listeners who can connect with paint-peeling noise and sad boy whinging that occasionally bubbles over into omnidirectional wounded outbursts, there’s no finer substitute in 2025. That noise, likely to be fabulous to some and a deal-breaker to others, is Hornet Disaster‘s calling card. It’s a patina of vibrating discordance that envelopes just about every second of the album, like a huddled mass of peeved insects. Even the chipper opening moments of “Hornet Disaster,” which recall a similar upbeat greeting on Jane’s Addiction’s “Stop,” sound like they’re being delivered through the haunted — or just defective — intercom from Disco Elysium. Whether a song, like “Meanie” is built on hard-charging guitar pyrotechnics; indulges in some folktronica, like “Green Tea Seaweed Sea,” or leans into lovelorn signifiers with acoustic guitar, like “Heartbeats,” there’s a good chance that at least one instrument sounds like it’s being played through several of Sleigh Bells‘ discarded, blown-out amps…

While Hornet Disaster is always interesting and more often than not enjoyable, it does have a couple of weak points. The LP was winnowed down from a pool of 70 songs, and the cutting could’ve continued. There’s no outright clunkers on the album, but some of its 19 tracks are more equal than others. It’s easy to envision a tighter, more digestible version if the LP with no skippable tracks after some extremely light pruning.

The album’s other considerable drawback is Sputnik’s singing. Their voice isn’t bad, but it has a lamenting-but-flat quality reminiscent of Rivers Cuomo. That’s a voice that’s sold an improbably number of albums, but put to its best use on shorter LPs. Sometimes that relative blankness serves the material, sometimes it doesn’t. However, to the album’s immense benefit Sputnik, unlike Cuomo, seems comfortable letting their mask of stoic sanity slip in the form of a wounded wail or unhinged scream.1 The bigger the swing, the better it plays with the more-is-more production choices. The way the raw-throated Tasmanian devil shrieks at the end of “Hug” melt into frothing guitar din is wonderful. It’s rare that an album’s strengths and weaknesses can find common ground and complement each other, but Hornet Disaster is that kind of LP, and it turns any quibbles into minor blips drowned out by a wall of vespine vibes.

Best of the rest

When choosing a subject for this column, I usually try to pick something that I expect to get less attention than it deserves and that I can hope to write about somewhat intelligently. This winds up ruling a lot of albums out either because I expect them to be covered thoroughly and thoughtfully elsewhere, or because I didn’t feel up to coming up with a worthy approach to the subject. There’s also a handful of good-to-great releases I wrote about for other websites, and I never double-dip. But a rapid-fire rundown of LPs from the first half of this year that are worth your time feels appropriate. In no particular order, I heartily recommend:

Why things are only going to get better

The next three months are packed with promise, including my most anticipated LP of the year.

Sprints’ second album, All That Is Over, is slated to be released Sept. 26, and I could not possibly be more excited for a follow-up to my favorite album of 2024, Letter to Self. I expect to be a fan as long as they’re putting out music based on the strength of that album. The Dublin post-punkers are vital and fiery in a way that few bands equal, and Karla Chubb’s roar can give me goosebumps. But their LP isn’t the only thing on the horizon worth hyping.

Just this month, we’ll get a long-awaited reunion album from Clipse and a much-anticipated sophomore release from Wet Leg. Albums from Alex G, $ilkMoney and Tyler Childers also pique my curiosity.

August is set to feature a stacked and eclectic mix of Anamanaguchi, Big Freedia, JID, Osees, Molly Tuttle, Hunx and His Punx, Nourished By Time, the Beths, the Hives and Wolf Alice, among others. As someone who keeps a torch lit for the blog bands of yesteryear, likes Southern rap, enjoys Americana and is happiest blasting catchy guitar riffs directly into my skull, that’s a lot to like.

September has a couple of the most hyped indie acts around, a solid slate of legacy acts and a few delightful oddballs on tap. Albums from Big Thief, David Byrne, Cut Copy, Shame, Baxter Dury, Liquid Mike, Maruja, Black Lips, Wednesday, White Reaper and more are expected.

There’s a good dozen or so artists with albums coming out that could’ve made those capsule previews — Cate Le Bon, Nation of Language, Cardi B, CMAT, and Superchunk among others — which just underscores what an embarrassment of riches awaits.

There’s an excellent chance that by the end of December, my “good not great” assessment of this year will be woefully outdated.