The Bacon Review

An annual Top 31 countdown of the best albums of the year

  • Home
  • About
  • Top 31
  • Search
  • Bluesky
  • Instagram
  • RSS

#14 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — Lorde

January 18, 2026 by Royal Stuart in 2025, Top 31

Virgin by Lorde

It’s been 12 years (and two non-charting albums) since we saw Ella Marija Lani Yelich-O'Connor, aka Lorde, grace us with her presence on the Top 31. With Virgin, her fourth LP, the 29-year-old singer/songwriter has given us what I would call her best album yet.

Lorde has been through quite a bit since her 2013 debut, Pure Heroine, was at #28 that year. After the success of that platinum-selling, #3 in the US album, her sophomore album, the Jack Antonoff-co-produced Melodrama, full of synths and beats made for moving your body, went all the way to #1. Her third album, Solar Power, also co-produced by Antonoff, abandoned the beats for acoustic indie pop, and consequently fared the worst, “only” charting at #5 in the US.

In the years that ensued after Solar Power, which came out in 2021, Lorde had a bit of an identity crisis. She set out and succeeded in overcoming the crippling stage fright she’d been experiencing up to that point, but then turned that critical eye towards her weight in an unhealthy way, which she sang about on a Charli xcx track that was released as part of the Brat remix project called Brat and it’s completely different but also still brat, on a song called “Girl, so confusing,” released summer 2024. “And scared to be in your pictures / ‘Cause for the last couple years / I’ve been at war with my body / I tried to starve myself thinner / And then I gained all the weight back.”

In an interview with Rolling Stone released around the time Virgin was released, Lorde spoke of how her healing from the stage fright involved MDMA and psilocybin therapy (successfully). But she was not only treating that and the eating disorder. She was also reconciling a life (between the ages of 13 and 27) of relying on (and sometimes dating) boys and men significantly older than her, and the inherent power-dynamic problems that creates. Ultimately, Virgin is the outcome of that personal growth. Not only does she now feel she’s got a grip on her life, but she’s better understanding what it means to be Lorde — who she is, what she needs, and what life will look like going forward as a near-30-year-old megastar.

As part of this new understanding, gender identity has come to the fore. The Lorde we see in the videos from this new album still exude the overt sex appeal that comes with being a pop icon, the shift in how she represents herself has become less girly-girl femme all the time, in her words more “masc.” Take a look at the video for opening track “Hammer” (featured above). Lorde seductively lies in the grass in a bikini and suspended in a warehouse completely naked while singing about the themes for the rest of the album. “I burn, and I sing, and I scheme, and I dance. Some days, I’m a woman, some days, I’m a man.”

She goes even harder on the gender fluidity on “Man of the Year,” a video where she duct tapes her chest flat and sings “Gliding through / Like new from my recent ego death” and “Take my knife and I cut the cord / My babe can‘t believe I‘ve become someone else / Someone more like myself / Who’s got’ love me like this? … Let’s hear it for the man of the year.” There’s a definite masculinity rooted in her psyche that has finally started to show itself, and she wants the world to know it.

Musically, there’s a good reason this album hits different. On Virgin, Lorde parted ways with Jack Antonoff and the acoustic folkiness of her last record. Instead, she co-wrote and co-produced the album with producer Jim-E Stack, who also happens to have co-written and co-produced Top 31 favorite Bon Iver’s1 latest, the amazing SABLE, fABLE. Together, they brought the Melodrama beats back, too. Check out “What Was That”, a dancey, get-your-body moving song about the fallout from the aforementioned relationships with unnamed older men.

I’ve loved Lorde’s sultry delivery since her debut, and I’m glad she’s coming out of her third decade on Earth stronger, more self-aware, and in control of her situation. We’re all better off for it, and I can’t wait to hear what she does in her 30s.

1. All of Bon Iver’s albums that have come out in the duration have been featured on the Top 31 since I started it in 2009: #17 in 2009, #6 in 2011, #1 in 2016, and #9 in 2019. And that’s not to mention lead singer Justin Vernon’s other collaborations that have been on the Top 31, such as Big Red Machine and his work with Taylor Swift.↩

__________________________________________

  1. Alex by Daughter of Swords
  2. Everybody Scream by Florence + the Machine
  3. Let God Sort Em Out by Clipse
  4. Forever Howlong by Black Country, New Road
  5. Phantom Island by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
  6. DOGA by Juana Molina
  7. The Rubber Teeth Talk by Daisy the Great
  8. Billboard Heart by Deep Sea Diver
  9. Thee Black Boltz by Tunde Adebimpe
  10. Sinister Grift by Panda Bear
  11. DON'T TAP THE GLASS by Tyler, The Creator
  12. I’m Only F**king Myself by Lola Young
  13. Who Is The Sky? by David Byrne
  14. THE BPM by Sudan Archives
  15. The Life of a Showgirl by Taylor Swift
  16. moisturizer by Wet Leg
  17. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 18, 2026 /Royal Stuart
lorde, jack antonoff, jim-e stack, charli xcx, bon iver, taylor swift, big red machine
2025, Top 31
Comment

#15 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — Daughter of Swords

January 17, 2026 by Royal Stuart in 2025, Top 31

Alex by Daughter of Swords

Thank god the history of and my history with the artist at #15 is limited – after two nearly 1,000-word write ups for Florence and Clipse, I’m glad to have the opportunity to be a bit more brief. But please don’t take my brevity as any sort of slight on Alex Sauser-Monnig, otherwise known as Daughter of Swords, and their wonderful sophomore album Alex.

Sauser-Monnig has been making music for some time – they’re part of the folk trio Mountain Man, which has been around since 2009. Alex is the follow-up to their solo debut, Dawnbreaker, that came out in 2019. Go ahead and hit play on the video above, for the lead single from the new album, “Talk to You.” It’ll be a great introduction into the brilliance that is Daughter of Swords, and maybe you won’t even need to read the rest of what I write before you download / buy the album yourself.

Bouncy, ecstatic hand claps and what feels like general happiness draws you in immediately. And you could likely leave it at that and thoroughly enjoy the record. But it’s when you start to pay attention to the lyrics that things get really interesting. Sauser-Monnig told Indy Week, “I wrote a happy-sounding record about the death of humanity on planet Earth… I have a hard time saying the world is dying… I don’t want to give up on it, but it feels like we’re Thelma & Louise–ing toward the cliff.”

“Money Hits” is a favorite of mine, with its sparse acoustic guitar, low-fi percussion, and piano solo in the middle. It could be a brief, joyful, escape with a new fling, or a cry for escape. “Running through the woods / while the water rises / lightning flashes / worlds collide / all I wanna know / is there anything / better than letting go?” Later on in the album, “Strange,” while bubbly, is particularly dark. “I feel strange / but it’s just a natural reaction / to a world coming apart at the seams.”

Alex hits all the right indie rock sweet spots, landing somewhere in the early 2000s for me. The Shins meet Rilo Kiley, but with a healthy dose of the kind of “overwhelming social anxiety while in love” we can easily find ourselves in here in the 2020s. It’s right up my alley, and I hope it is for you, too.

__________________________________________

  1. Everybody Scream by Florence + the Machine
  2. Let God Sort Em Out by Clipse
  3. Forever Howlong by Black Country, New Road
  4. Phantom Island by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
  5. DOGA by Juana Molina
  6. The Rubber Teeth Talk by Daisy the Great
  7. Billboard Heart by Deep Sea Diver
  8. Thee Black Boltz by Tunde Adebimpe
  9. Sinister Grift by Panda Bear
  10. DON'T TAP THE GLASS by Tyler, The Creator
  11. I’m Only F**king Myself by Lola Young
  12. Who Is The Sky? by David Byrne
  13. THE BPM by Sudan Archives
  14. The Life of a Showgirl by Taylor Swift
  15. moisturizer by Wet Leg
  16. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 17, 2026 /Royal Stuart
daughter of swords, mountain man, the shins, rilo kiley
2025, Top 31
Comment

#16 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — Florence + the Machine

January 16, 2026 by Royal Stuart in 2025, Top 31

Everybody Scream by Florence + the Machine

In the immortal words of our Queen Bey, who run the world? Girls do, of course. And despite my best efforts to try and ignore the artist at #16, Florence Welch and her band The Machine have been in the ruling class for the better part of two decades. It took six albums, but I’m finally here to pay homage to one of the greats.

Florence + the Machine have been making music since 2007. Of the eight musicians in the band, four of them (Florence Welch – the primary songwriter of the band –  on lead vocals, Isabella Summers on keyboards, Robert Ackroyd on lead guitar, and Tom Monger on harp) have been together for all 19 of those years. The other four (Cyrus Bayandor on bass, Aku Orraca-Tetteh on percussion, Dionne Douglas on violin, and Loren Humphrey on drums) joined the band in 2018.

The band released their debut album, Lungs, in 2009, which went to #1 in the UK and Poland, and #14 in the US, selling over 3 million copies globally on the strength of singles “Kiss With a Fist” and “Dog Days Are Over.” They were also given the British Album of the Year award that year at the Brit Awards. All worthy accolades. The band released four albums over the next 12 years, landing at #1 or 2 in the UK and within the top 10 each year in the US – amazing feats. And I still didn’t pay close attention.

In the time between their fifth album, Dance Fever, in 2022 and this latest in 2025, Welch made a high-profile guest appearance on what I would call the best song on Taylor Swift’s (#29 this year, and #4 in 2020) lackluster 2024 album Tortured Poets Department, “Florida!!!.” She even performed its anthemic, triple-exclamation-point worthy chorus on stage with Swift at Wembley Stadium during an October 2024 stop on the Eras Tour.1 Because I live with a couple of Swifties, this meant for a brief time Florence’s voice could be heard throughout my house.

One of the main drivers of The Bacon Review early on was to share music videos. As a child of the 80s, and a designer by trade, I have a deep affinity for the visual forms that music can take. And that is how this album, Everybody Scream, Florence’s sixth, found its way to the front of my playlists in 2025: through a video. I stumbled across the video for “One of the Greats” (featured above), and was enthralled. It features Florence, 39, in the back of an old whale of a car, white leather and polished wood finishes. She’s wearing wayfarers, a black velvet suit jacket over a white button-down, and holding an unlit cigarette, giving a strong Patti Smith vibe, as if she’s on her way home from the shoot for the cover of Smith’s 1975 album Horses. The car is moving forward, with remnants of a recent rain splashed on the windows, and streetlights moving slowly by, while Florence lip syncs to the lyrics. The song is over six minutes long, and the video is done all in one take, locked on Florence and her flowing red mane.

The song is a slow burn that builds, not to a towering crescendo like a lot of F+tM’s songs do, but to a mild cacophony that disintegrates into madness at the end. Welch performed the song once in the studio, with IDLES (#16 in 2024) guitarist Mark Bowen taking lead guitar, performing alongside her during that one take. The song also features guitar and production from Aaron Dessner (he of The National and Big Red Machine, who has been featured on the Top 31 so many times I should probably try running for president of the Aaron Dessner fanclub). The song won me over instantly – the entire package: the video, Florence, Bowen and Dessner.

The video itself was directed by Autumn de Wilde, whose work I’ve been loving for a long while (check out her video for “Once In My Life,” the Decemberists song for their #14 in 2018 album I’ll Be Your Girl). Unbeknownst to me, De Wilde has had a long partnership with F+tM, having directed five videos for the band from their previous two albums.2

That partnership carried into Everybody Scream, starting with a great little teaser called “Bury a Scream” that was released a couple months prior to the album release. Then came the title song, “Everybody Scream.” That, and “Buckle” both feature Top 31 regular Mitski (#9 in 2023, #18 in 2022, and #24 in 2016) on backing vocals. “Sympathy Magic” rounds out the videos de Wilde has made for this album, and goes so far as to feature Welch naked at the beginning of the video (meaning, it’s mildly NSFW).

Bowen and Dessner combine with Welch to take production credits for the entire album. So, what I like about the songs in the videos above stretches across the entire length of the album. “Drink Deep,” is particularly good, with Welch’s drawn out vibrato, evokes another powerful female voice: Cocteau Twins’ Elizabeth Fraser, from This Mortal Coil’s cover of Tim Buckley’s “Song to the Siren.” Fraser is one of many voices with whom you can call Welch’s ancestry. You’ll hear odes to Janis, Stevie, Tori, PJ, Fiona, and Sharon throughout.

Who doesn’t love a great and powerful female lead? Don’t let this album slip past you – it’s a swift kick in the gut mixed with the unsettling warmth of a house fire. I’m now a committed Florence + the Machine stan, and I can’t wait to hear what they do next.

1. Welch also sang drowned-out background harmonies on The Weeknd’s “Reflections Laughing,” from his 2025 album Hurry Up Tomorrow, which also featured rapper Travis Scott. It’s such a minimal appearance, it barely begs mentioning at all.↩
2. De Wilde directed “Big God” from 2018’s High as Hope, and “King,” “Heaven is Free,” “My Love,” and “Free from 2022’s Dance Fever. That last one, “Free,” is fun, starring Bill Nighy alongside Welch as her anxiety come to life.↩

__________________________________________

  1. Let God Sort Em Out by Clipse
  2. Forever Howlong by Black Country, New Road
  3. Phantom Island by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
  4. DOGA by Juana Molina
  5. The Rubber Teeth Talk by Daisy the Great
  6. Billboard Heart by Deep Sea Diver
  7. Thee Black Boltz by Tunde Adebimpe
  8. Sinister Grift by Panda Bear
  9. DON'T TAP THE GLASS by Tyler, The Creator
  10. I’m Only F**king Myself by Lola Young
  11. Who Is The Sky? by David Byrne
  12. THE BPM by Sudan Archives
  13. The Life of a Showgirl by Taylor Swift
  14. moisturizer by Wet Leg
  15. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 16, 2026 /Royal Stuart
florence and the machine, taylor swift, idles, the national, big red machine, autumn de wilde, the decemberists, mitski, cocteau twins, Tim buckley, janis joplin, stevie nicks, tori amos, pj harvey, fiona apple, sharon van etten, the weeknd, bill nighy
2025, Top 31
Comment

#17 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — Clipse

January 15, 2026 by Royal Stuart in 2025, Top 31

Let God Sort Em Out by Clipse

My newfound love of hip-hop, described at length throughout the 2024 Top 31 (culminating in Kendrick Lamar’s #1 album, _GNX),_ has carried through into 2025. As I’m new(ish) to the genre, I didn’t have a connection to the duo at #17 prior to 2025, despite them having been making music together and individually for over thirty years. Brothers Gene and Terrence Thornton, better known by their stage names Malice and Pusha T, are collectively known as Clipse. Between them, they have ten studio albums (and countless guest appearances), but Let God Sort Em Out is only their fourth album together, and their first in sixteen years.

It took the brothers a bit to hit their stride. Malice, the older of the two (currently 53) started rapping in junior high. In 1990, he was introduced to Pharrell Williams by mutual friends. He went into the Army after high school in 1991, and then tagged back up with Pharrell once his stint was done. Pusha, still in high school (now 48), began tagging along with his big brother into the studio. They recorded their first song together in the mid 90s, and Pharrell pulled the strings to get the duo signed to Elektra records in 1996. Their first full album together, Exclusive Audio Footage, produced by Pharrell and his business partner Chad Hugo under their production name The Neptunes, was slated to be released three years later. Due to poor marketing and even worse reception for the lead single, “The Funeral,” the album was shelved and the duo were dropped by the label in 1999.

Pharrell, continuing to believe in the brothers, signed them again in 2001, this time to his new Star Trak imprint at Arista Records. In 2002, their first official album, Lord Willin’ was released, along with what has become their most famous song, “Grindin’,” which of course features Pharrell as well. (The video is worth checking out just for how silly Pharrell is and how serious the young Thornton brothers are.)

Controversy continued to follow the duo around. While they recorded material for their follow-up album, Star Trak moved onto Interscope Records, leaving Clipse stuck in their contract with Jive Records, which had recently merged with the rappers’ label. While Jive focused on its non-rap acts, Clipse were left in the lurch, finishing the recording of Hell Hath No Fury but having no means to release it. They ended up suing Jive, and eventually reaching an agreement in 2006. The sophomore album, also produced by Pharrell, reached mass acclaim for songs like “Mr. Me Too” and “Wamp Wamp (What It Do).” In 2007, the band moved over to Columbia records and began working on their third album, working with Diddy’s production team The Hitmen over Pharrell. Released in 2009, Til The Casket Drops did not fare as well as their previous two records.

A year later, the brothers disbanded to pursue solo careers. Pusha signed with Kanye’s GOOD Music label with whom he released four well-received albums. He succeeded West as the president of GOOD in 2015, and stuck with the label until until the end of 2022, eventually cutting ties with West after his antisemitic and pro-race remarks. Malice found god, wrote a memoir, and announced a name change to No Malice. He released two albums to mixed acclaim – people still praised him for his lyrics, but the lack of Pharrell production hurt him musically.

Between the split in 2010 and their eventual reunion as Clipse in 2024, the brothers made limited appearances together. They featured on each others album’s and even rapped together as Clipse on Kanye’s 2019 song “Use This Gospel” and on DJ Nico’s track “Punch Bowl,” which was produced by The Neptunes. The duo started to hype their new Clipse material that would eventually become Let God Sort Em Out in 2024, hyping up the all-Pharrell production and key guest appearances from artists like Nas and John Legend. They had signed to Def Jam Records at the end of 2024, and were prepared to release the album in early 2025. Due to continued controversy, including issues related to Pusha T’s own feud with Drake back in 2018, the album was held back and the brothers were dropped by Def Jam. The duo finally self-released the album in July 2025.

Whew.

And we’re all the better for it. The album is wall-to-wall fantastic, and jam-packed with great Pharrell production and key guest stars:

  • “P.O.V.” (featured above), has Tyler, the Creator (#25 this year, #12 last year)
  • “Fico” has Stove God Cooks
  • “The Birds Don’t Sing” has John Legend (#17 in 2017) and Voices of Fire – in spite of the Legend chorus, this is quite a moving song, having both brothers recount their last conversations with their mother and father, who recently passed within four months of each other
  • “Chains and Whips” features Top 31 fave Kendrick Lamar (#1 last year, #16 in 2022, #21 in 2018, #22 in 2017, and #29 in 2015)

They’ve released one other video from the album, So Be It,” which has no guest star but has an amazingly catchy sampled hook created by Pharrell. While you’re at it, check out their tiny desk concert from July. I love that we live in a world that a curse-laden set by two middle-aged brothers can still make waves on NPR. Putting a capper on the year, Clipse appeared on JID’s God Does Like Ugly, on the song “Community.”

With a wealth of music under their belts, Clipse have proven that you can keep doing what you do and remain at the top of your game. My love of this new album proves you don’t need to listen to their earlier work to enjoy the current. The brothers have a flow unlike most rappers out there, and I can’t recommend this album enough.

__________________________________________

  1. Forever Howlong by Black Country, New Road
  2. Phantom Island by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
  3. DOGA by Juana Molina
  4. The Rubber Teeth Talk by Daisy the Great
  5. Billboard Heart by Deep Sea Diver
  6. Thee Black Boltz by Tunde Adebimpe
  7. Sinister Grift by Panda Bear
  8. DON'T TAP THE GLASS by Tyler, The Creator
  9. I’m Only F**king Myself by Lola Young
  10. Who Is The Sky? by David Byrne
  11. THE BPM by Sudan Archives
  12. The Life of a Showgirl by Taylor Swift
  13. moisturizer by Wet Leg
  14. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 15, 2026 /Royal Stuart
clipse, malice, pusha t, pharrell williams, chad hugo, kanye west, dj nico, diddy, tyler the creator, stove god cooks, john legend, voices of fire, kendrick lamar, jid
2025, Top 31
Comment

#18 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — Black Country, New Road

January 14, 2026 by Royal Stuart in 2025, Top 31

Forever Howlong by Black Country, New Road

Despite having been featured on the Top 31 twice in the past three years, the album at #18 should really be consider a debut studio album. Ants From Up There, the sophomore album from the original incarnation of Cambridge, England band Black Country, New Road, was featured at #11 in 2022. As I wrote in my review of that album, the band’s then lead singer, Isaac Wood, had left the band four days prior to the album’s release. His departure left the band without a front man and a full slate of 2022 festival shows to fulfill. Determined to carry on, the band threw together a full set of new songs to be sung by others in the six-piece.

Just over a year after the release of Ants, the newly defined band with their newly defined sound (they made no attempt to carry on with their Wood-led songs or to try and replace Wood’s gorgeous voice), the band released Live at Bush Hall, which landed way up at #6 in 2024. The album made a statement: we’ve moved on, and we’re even better than we were before. But a studio album it was not. In fact, the songs released on that fantastic live album will likely never be recorded in the studio.

Two years after that, the band has (hopefully?) finished redefining who they are, releasing the first studio album for this new incarnation: Forever Howlong. In place of the missing Wood, the three women in the band are now alternating on singing lead. Violinist Georgia Ellery (who is also half of the duo Jockstrap, whose lone studio release I Love You Jennifer B landed at #21 in 2022); bassist Tyler Hyde (daughter of Kyle Hyde, who is half of Top 31 alums Underworld1); and pianist May Kershaw (whose “Turbines/Pigs” was my favorite from Bush Hall, and drove me to tears when seen live at THING 2023) each take lead on the songs whose lyrics they wrote.

Beyond the major shift in lead singing, there is very little similarity between this album and their last studio album. (On the interim live album Bush Hall, saxophonist Lewis Evans wrote and sang two songs, but he sticks to his instrument on Howlong.) I’ve been staring at the end of that last sentence for so long, trying to figure out how I would define this new era for BC,NR. The best I could come up with is “indie chamber pop prog rock,” which is, funny enough, how I’d probably define The Decemberists. But they are nothing like BC,NR, so that must be a terrible way for me to describe them.

Instead, I’ll do it the best way I can – by asking you to listen to them yourself. Check out my video from the band’s performance at the Moore Theatre back on May 24 last year, where they played the title song, “Forever Howlong.” You’ll notice the entire band are all playing tenor recorders while songwriter May Kershaw conducts from behind her keyboard. Yes, a song performed entirely with recorders, the instrument we all first learned how to play (badly) in elementary school band. Then there’s the opening track and lead single from the album, “Besties,” written by violinist Ellery. The harpsichord opening to the song is unlike anything else you’ll hear in indie rock today. “Happy Birthday” (featured in the video above), written by Hyde, is a lovely, meandering song about intergenerational discontent. And finally, I recommend watching the band’s KEXP Performance from May 2025. They perform the three songs mentioned above as well as “For the Cold Country,” also written by Kershaw.

It’s been a wild ride being a BC,NR fan for the past few years. I’ve loved every iteration of the band, and will stick with them should they decide to shuffle the deck again. But I also hope they stick with the good thing they’ve got going right now. Either way, I can’t wait to hear what they do next.

1. Underworld appeared at #30 in 2016 and #25 in 2024↩

__________________________________________

  1. Phantom Island by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
  2. DOGA by Juana Molina
  3. The Rubber Teeth Talk by Daisy the Great
  4. Billboard Heart by Deep Sea Diver
  5. Thee Black Boltz by Tunde Adebimpe
  6. Sinister Grift by Panda Bear
  7. DON'T TAP THE GLASS by Tyler, The Creator
  8. I’m Only F**king Myself by Lola Young
  9. Who Is The Sky? by David Byrne
  10. THE BPM by Sudan Archives
  11. The Life of a Showgirl by Taylor Swift
  12. moisturizer by Wet Leg
  13. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 14, 2026 /Royal Stuart
black country new road, the decemberists, jockstrap, underworld
2025, Top 31
Comment

#19 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard

January 13, 2026 by Royal Stuart in 2025, Top 31

Phantom Island by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard

As the old adage goes, “another year, another fantastic King Gizzard album.” I’ve only actively listened to King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard for just over two years, which makes me a downright KGLW noob. But it was practically love at first listen, with their 2024 album Flight b471 landing at (#20 that year) and their two 2023 albums, PetroDragonic Apocalypse; or, Dawn of Eternal Night: An Annihilation of Planet Earth and the Beginning of Merciless Damnation and The Silver Cord landing at (#5 that year).

Phantom Island, the band’s 27th studio album 1, is the sibling to last year’s Flight b471, as the core tracks were recorded currently for both albums. The band has explained that they put the “rowdy” songs on Flight, leaving the non-rowdy songs to eventually end up on Phantom Island, but not without some additional production. The songs that would eventually end up on the new album “felt like they needed this other energy and colour,” said frontman Stu Mackenzie. “We needed to splash some different paint on the canvas.”

It helps to be a global band with a massive following – the “other energy and colour” turned out to be the addition of British conductor Chad Kelly, who wrote elaborate orchestral arrangements for the songs and assembled a group of musicians to dub over the original tracks. The album that resulted feels like an extension of the 70s roots rock ethos developed on Flight b471 cranked to 11. The Reeses Peanut Butter Cup commercial comes to mind, but instead of chocolate and peanut butter, it’s “you got your symphony in my rock & roll!” vs “you got your rock & roll in my symphony!” Somehow it all works. “Grow Wings and Fly” (featured above) has gorgeous subtle strings flowing throughout the song. “Deadstick” has the entire brass section going hog wild2.

As I mentioned at the end of last year’s review of Flight b471, my fandom of KGLW grew to the point where I was flying to another city to watch them perform. Throughout 2025, the band toured globally, performing with the local symphony in each locale. So, off to San Diego I went to witness the spectacle first hand. KGLW have the reputation of a jam band, as they tend to not play the same songs at consecutive performances. (Having 27 albums of material to pull from makes it quite easy to not duplicate, but quite a task to keep the band fresh and ready to go on any number of hundreds of songs for each concert.) But playing with a 30-40 person orchestra with a conductor leading the charge made their usual fluidity impossible.

What transpired in San Diego was still fantastic: a tight two-hour set, performing Phantom Island in its entirety, with a 20-minute intermission (where the band played an extended version of one of my favorites, “Motor Spirit”). They did play many other past KGLW songs, now reworked for an orchestra accompaniment, and it was glorious. Would do again.

Phantom Island is not King Gizzard’s best album. But with 27 albums now under their belt, the creative output of the six-piece is still surprisingly top notch. And they’re still having so much infectious fun, it’s impossible to not smile any time you hear and see them. If you give this album and find it’s not your speed, I suggest diving into one of the two 2023 albums mentioned above (if one doesn’t work, try the other). If that doesn’t work, keep trying. There is so much variety in their music, I guarantee something will eventually click. And then you and I can book tickets to see them jam out somewhere soon. I’d love that.

1. The band’s debut, 12 Bar Bruise, came out in 2012. Phantom Island came out in 2025, with 25 studios albums having been released between those two records. That’s an insane pace of creativity for any band: nearly two albums a year, every year, in under less than a decade and a half.↩
2. The band released a 13 minute documentary, The Making of Phantom Island, which doesn’t so much tell the story of the making of the album but instead provides a mishmash of clips that gives a tonal overview of how it all came together.↩

__________________________________________

  1. DOGA by Juana Molina
  2. The Rubber Teeth Talk by Daisy the Great
  3. Billboard Heart by Deep Sea Diver
  4. Thee Black Boltz by Tunde Adebimpe
  5. Sinister Grift by Panda Bear
  6. DON'T TAP THE GLASS by Tyler, The Creator
  7. I’m Only F**king Myself by Lola Young
  8. Who Is The Sky? by David Byrne
  9. THE BPM by Sudan Archives
  10. The Life of a Showgirl by Taylor Swift
  11. moisturizer by Wet Leg
  12. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 13, 2026 /Royal Stuart
king gizzard and the lizard wizard
2025, Top 31
Comment

#20 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — Juana Molina

January 12, 2026 by Royal Stuart in 2025, Top 31

DOGA by Juana Molina

I’m gonna fuck this up. I don’t know how to write about this wonderful musician. I don’t have the depth of knowledge necessary to wax on about a Spanish-singing Argentinian auteur. Or maybe I just don’t have the usual tropes I fall back on? Maybe this is more of a challenge than I’m used to, and that voice in the back of my head is balking at needing to go outside of my comfort zone? Growth at age almost-52 is harder than you might think. Here goes nothing.

Juana Molina is not the kind of artist you’d typically find in the Top 31. Living in Buenos Aires, 64 years old, creating dreamy “folktronica” that she typically sings in her native Spanish – she’s not the typical indie musician I am drawn to by any measure. And yet, with her eighth album DOGA, she’s made what I feel is the 20th best album of 2025.

Molina’s path to college radio play across the world started in 1961, when she was born to a tango-singing father and an actress mother. Unable to make money in a career in music, she focused on the stage, quickly reaching some fame in Argentina as a sketch comedy actress. Apparently in the early 90s she was quite popular across the country, and at the height of her acting career she quit, finally able to turn her focus back to the music that was overwhelming her psyche.

Since releasing her debut album, Rara, in 1996, her climb to recognition outside of Argentina grew slowly. That album did not find an audience in her home country, but she was undeterred. A quick jaunt to Los Angeles allowed her the space to put together her second album, 2000’s Segundo, which caught the attention of David Byrne (see #27, who as you remember founded world-music focused record label Luaka Bop). He asked Molina to open for him on his tour that year. Her audience grew slowly over her next three albums, expanding her global presence into Europe and Japan. Her fifth album, 2008’s Un dia, got an unexpected boost when her music was featured in the background of a Radiolab episode in 2008 titled “Sperm.” Due to an outpouring of inquiries about that music, the popular podcast ran a whole segment featuring Molina in 2009, adding an even greater amount of US-based attention to the singer / songwriter.

Her sixth and seventh albums, 2013’s Wed 21 and 2017’s Halo were well-received, and while I know I had heard of the artist by this time, I still hadn’t given her or her music any attention. Then DOGA came out in November. And this time, thanks to a friend who earlier in the year had forced me to listen to a Juana Molina song1, I paid closer attention. It may have taken me nearly 30 years to come around, but I’m so glad I finally did.

DOGA is one hell of an album. Molina’s soft-spoken voice sounds to my non-Spanish speaking ears like an additional instrument, delicately laced across the top of intricate, off-kilter, mostly-electronic beats. Hit play on the video for “Desinhumano,” above. I hear what sound like influences of Björk (Icelandic, 60) and The Knife / Fever Ray (Karen Dreijer, Swedish, 50), but as Molina is older than both of those huge, international female artists, I wonder if I should actually be saying they’re influenced by her. I can confidently say if you’ve been a fan of either of those artists in the past, then Juana Molina is right up your alley.

It’s a rare thing to come to an artist for the first time on their 8th album and 30 years into their musical career. Normally at this point, if an artist makes it to their eighth album, they’ve settled into their “only the super fans will dig this” era of their career, no longer able to bring in new fans the way their earlier albums may have. Molina and her album DOGA is clearly different. Hopefully you hear it, too. And I hope this review did justice to her and this fantastic album.

1. In January 2025, I created a new way for new music to enter my life. I gathered a small group of friends for the purposes of sharing music between us. We dubbed it “Record Cabinet,” and decided to gather every ~6 weeks or so and bring two songs to share based on a theme as established by that session’s host. For the October “Foreign Exchange” theme, a friend (hi Brent!) brought the Juana Molina song “El Perro” from Segundo as his song representative of “a song from the Southern Hemisphere. I love all the different ways new music can make it to my ears.↩

__________________________________________

  1. The Rubber Teeth Talk by Daisy the Great
  2. Billboard Heart by Deep Sea Diver
  3. Thee Black Boltz by Tunde Adebimpe
  4. Sinister Grift by Panda Bear
  5. DON'T TAP THE GLASS by Tyler, The Creator
  6. I’m Only F**king Myself by Lola Young
  7. Who Is The Sky? by David Byrne
  8. THE BPM by Sudan Archives
  9. The Life of a Showgirl by Taylor Swift
  10. moisturizer by Wet Leg
  11. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 12, 2026 /Royal Stuart
juana molina, bjork, fever ray, the knife, radiolab, david byrne
2025, Top 31
Comment

#21 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — Daisy the Great

January 11, 2026 by Royal Stuart in 2025, Top 31

The Rubber Teeth Talk by Daisy the Great

You may remember Daisy the Great from when their 2023 sophomore album, All You Need Is Time, was (#29 on that year’s Top 31). I’m excited to report that their follow-up, The Rubber Teeth Talk has the band focusing in on what they do best, to great effect. When I wrote about their last album, I dubbed the band “First Aid Kit without the twang.” But I don’t know if that description holds true.

The pop-songs-with-great-hooks mentality is there, same as it always was. But the depth of Daisy the Great’s lyrics and the skill with which they execute their songwriting has become richer, sharpened to a fine point. When I listen to the album, I can tell something has changed that brought out this new feeling, but I couldn’t point at anything in particular and say “there – that’s why it’s better.” However, while researching for this review, I discovered one wonderful reason: DtG brought in the big guns to produce this record. Catherine Marks, who co-produced my #1 album of 2023, boygenius’s the record, figured out how to bring out the best of lead singers Kelley Dugan and Mina Walker and their quirky, wonderful harmonies.

Beyond the harmonies, Dugan and Walker know how to craft a hook. The opening track on the album, “Dog” (featured above), a listen. That, and “Mary’s at the Carnival,” are solid indie-rock gems. “Ballerina” is fun and makes me bounce off the walls, a rocking Courtney Barnett-esque song from another dimension

“Bird Bones,” with its repeating chorus “She was just back in town, where’s my friend where is she now” sounds innocent enough, until you realize they’re singing a heart wrenching line about a lost friend. The caption accompanying the instagram post about the song said “written in memory of our dear friend, Stephanie Rae Shafir, who passed away Feb 26, 2023. All of the drawings in the video are hers.”

I love that Dugan and Walker are starting to explore more interesting / trippy ways to build out their dual voices. They’re becoming masters of a musical technique called “hocket,” which is difficult to describe in words (and equally difficult to perform, I’d wager) but easy to understand when you see if performed. Check out their cover of Suzanne Vega’s venerable 80s song, “Tom’s Diner,” and you’ll get it immediately immediately. I had the immense pleasure of getting to hear them perform the song live, back in September.

The energy and excitement Daisy the Great bring to indie rock is infectious. I can’t wait to hear what they do next.

__________________________________________

  1. Billboard Heart by Deep Sea Diver
  2. Thee Black Boltz by Tunde Adebimpe
  3. Sinister Grift by Panda Bear
  4. DON'T TAP THE GLASS by Tyler, The Creator
  5. I’m Only F**king Myself by Lola Young
  6. Who Is The Sky? by David Byrne
  7. THE BPM by Sudan Archives
  8. The Life of a Showgirl by Taylor Swift
  9. moisturizer by Wet Leg
  10. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 11, 2026 /Royal Stuart
daisy the great, first aid kit, boygenius, suzanne vega
2025, Top 31
Comment

#22 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — Deep Sea Diver

January 10, 2026 by Royal Stuart in 2025, Top 31

Billboard Heart by Deep Sea Diver

Deep Sea Diver can easily be labeled “Seattle darlings.” Heavily played on KEXP, the band’s fantastic fourth album Billboard Heart and their first since signing to Seattle record label Sub Pop in September 2024, was voted by listeners as their #2 favorite album of 2025 (behind Wet Leg’s moisturizer, which appeared on this year’s Top 31 at #30.) As I, too, live in Seattle, nobody would blame you for saying I might be a little biased.

It’s true, I have liked this band for a long while. Their amazing debut album, History Speaks, was #23 in 2012, and equally good 2021 album Impossible Weight (KEXP listeners’ #1 album that year) was #22 in 2020, but they’re not without their faults: their sophomore album, 2016’s Secrets, did not make it onto the Top 31 at all. #23, DNP, #22, and now again with #22 – I swear I didn’t place them here intentionally, but I feel it does say something about the band if they’ve been featured by never broken the Top 20 in any year.

I’ve written plenty in my past posts about the band’s derivative but no-less powerful delivery. With Jessica Dobson on vocals and lead guitar, Peter Mansen on drums, Garrett Gue on bass, and Elliot Jackson on keyboards, they blast out powerful highs and exceedingly intimate lows. And they can also have fun and not always take themselves too seriously. Watch the video featured above, for their great song “What Do I Know?” It has the band performing in a small room while a cast of characters and excitement happens around them. The video for “Shovel” feels dark and brooding, shot in one take and focusing on the powerful presence Dobson brings to the screen. The video for the lead single from the album, the equally-titled “Billboard Heart,” is your more typical “rock & roll band outdoors in slow-motion” vibe.

For the best view of the band, check out their 2025 KEXP Performance, in front of a packed house at the KEXP Gathering Space at the Seattle Center. You get to hear live versions of five songs from the new album, with the added bonus of Kristyn Chapman on rhythm guitar and backup vocals (Gue is replaced by Michael Dondero on bass). If you still don’t get Deep Sea Diver after watching that, then there’s no convincing you, and we’re just going to have to agree to disagree. But also, you’re wrong. Billboard Heart is a great album, much deserving it’s place here on the Top 31 of 2025.

__________________________________________

  1. Thee Black Boltz by Tunde Adebimpe
  2. Sinister Grift by Panda Bear
  3. DON'T TAP THE GLASS by Tyler, The Creator
  4. I’m Only F**king Myself by Lola Young
  5. Who Is The Sky? by David Byrne
  6. THE BPM by Sudan Archives
  7. The Life of a Showgirl by Taylor Swift
  8. moisturizer by Wet Leg
  9. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 10, 2026 /Royal Stuart
deep sea diver, jessica dobson
2025, Top 31
Comment

#23 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — Tunde Adebimpe

January 09, 2026 by Royal Stuart in 2025, Top 31

Thee Black Boltz by Tunde Adebimpe

Tunde Adebimpe, the co-lead singer of stellar 2000’s band TV on the Radio (who are still touring despite having not put out any new music since 2014), has a higher-register voice that is pristine, and it rings through much more than it ever did on the grittier TVOTR stuff. His debut solo album, Thee Black Boltz, more than fills the ten-year void since his full band released their last album.

Born in St. Louis, MO, to immigrant Nigerian parents, Adebimpe has always had a commanding presence on stage, and his star has only gotten more shining now that he’s aged into a man whose dark skin is starkly contrasted by the half inch of bright-white hair atop his head and full beard. Over the past twenty years he’s been able to do so much more thanks to his talents and his looks, appearing in numerous films and television series (such as Jonathan Demme’s Rachel Getting Married, Noah Baumbach’s Wedding Story, and Disney’s Star Wars: Skeleton Crew).

But it’s his voice that keeps me coming back. On Boltz, he seems to alternate between a few personas within his solo work. There’s some skit-like jokey singing, paired with a couple songs that could have easily been found on a Living Colour album 30 years ago. For the lead single from the album, “Magnetic,” Adebimpe channels his best Ozzy, to great effect. This song also sounds the most like a TV on the Radio song, thanks to the appearance of his TVOTR bandmates Jaleel Bunton and Jahphet Landis.

“At The Moon,” the third track on the album, feels like a lost Nine Inch Nails song with the strong synth rhythm driving the song forward. And then there’s my favorite from the album, “Somebody New” (featured in the video above — it’s fun, you should watch it). Clearly influenced by the New Orders of old, this amazingly-fun hand-clappy dance song could easily have been a b-side to a recent song by The Weeknd.

With the success of this new solo album and with TV on the Radio touring again, Adibempe is just starting the ascent of a new arc in his career as he enters the second half of his century on earth. Check out his full KEXP performance, with his touring band that also includes Bunton and Landis, but distinctly lacks founding TVOTR member David Sitek. Sitek has been on hiatus while the band tours on the 20th anniversary of their smash debut Desperate Youth, Blood Thirsty Babes. I have seen no indication of anything new coming out, but if experience tells me anything, there’s got to be something on the horizon. This is all too good not to.

__________________________________________

  1. Sinister Grift by Panda Bear
  2. DON'T TAP THE GLASS by Tyler, The Creator
  3. I’m Only F**king Myself by Lola Young
  4. Who Is The Sky? by David Byrne
  5. THE BPM by Sudan Archives
  6. The Life of a Showgirl by Taylor Swift
  7. moisturizer by Wet Leg
  8. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 09, 2026 /Royal Stuart
tunde adebimpe, tv on the radio, jonathan demme, noah baumbach, the weeknd, ozzy osbourne, nine inch nails, new order
2025, Top 31
Comment

#24 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — Panda Bear

January 08, 2026 by Royal Stuart in 2025, Top 31

Sinister Grift by Panda Bear

The artist at #24 has been with the Bacon Top 31 since the very beginning. Panda Bear, whose real name is Noah Lennox, is a founding and current member of Animal Collective, whose 2009 album Merriweather Post Pavilion was #3 in 2009 and is likely the album I’ve listened to the most from that year’s top 10. (Does that make Merriweather the actual best album of 2009? Likely. But that’s a discussion for another day.)

Born in 1978, Panda Bear started producing music at 21/22 years old, with the release of his self-titled debut album in 1999. His first official album with Animal Collective is their debut album, Spirit They're Gone, Spirit They've Vanished1 from the year 2000. Since then, Lennox and his Animal Collective friends have been making music together and in various combinations of solo, duos, and triples ever since. In addition to the 12 albums Animal Collective have released, Panda Bear has released eight other albums, putting him at a pace of roughly three albums every four years for the past 26 years.

That is one hell of a pace for a person to be creating music. Granted, not one of those albums since the release of Merriweather has broken into the Top 31 until now. But to have been making music practically non-stop since 2000 and to still create something unexpected, relevant, and pleasing 26 years later is a huge accomplishment.

Sinister Grift, Panda Bear’s eighth official solo album, is pure joy, and unmistakably Panda Bear. It’s full of bouncy melodies, copious amounts of reverb, and doubled/tripled/quadrupled Beach-Boy-like harmonies. Engineered and mixed by Lennox’s second-grade classmate and Animal Collective bandmate Deakin (real name: Josh Dibb), you could easily mistake the album as being from the full Collective rather than just the two of them.

Numerous people helped with the album, including the other two members of Animal Collective, Geologist (real name: Brian Weltz) and Avey Tare (real name: David Portner), on a handful of songs. Cindy Lee, whose triple album Diamond Jubilee was on the Top 31 at #7 last year, performs on the wonderful song “Defense,” dropping in a masterful guitar solo in the middle of the song.

The video above, for the song “Ferry Lady,” is indicative of Panda Bear and Animal Collective’s trippy aesthetic. Just watch 30 seconds of the video above and you’ll swear someone has dropped something in your orange juice. The video for “Praise” is equally psychedelic.

Lennox put together an actual live band to tour the new album, a first for the Collective. You can watch them perform three songs on their “Tiny Desk Concert” for NPR earlier this year. I had the pleasure of seeing Panda Bear on the band’s tour back in May, and it was lovely if a little underwhelming. Through no fault of their own, I was seeing the band in the middle of my busiest show-going week of the year. Sandwiched between Sharon van Etten, Kendrick & SZA, and Jack White on one side, and Cheekface and Black Country, New Road on the other, my brain and body were experiencing live-show overload, and I was not prepared for the mellow chillwave 2 attack that Panda Bear delivered.

I’ve been listening to Sinister Grift on repeat all day today, and I’m now beginning to wonder if I’ve underestimated the staying power of this album. Outside of Animal Collective’s Merriweather and their 2005 album Feels, I have a feeling this new album by Panda Bear is going to keep finding its way back into my rotation. Maybe you’ll feel the same way.

1. This album was actually first released as an album by Avey Tare and Panda Bear. It was reclassified as the debut album by Animal Collective sometime later.↩
2. Panda Bear’s unbelievably good 2007 album Person Pitch is credited as the start of the electronic music microgenre “chillwave.” That album, and subsequent songs by Animal Collective and others, carved out a fairly substantial area of the music industry for themselves, resulting in the rise of bands like Neon Indian, Washed Out, and Toro y Moi.↩

__________________________________________

  1. DON'T TAP THE GLASS by Tyler, The Creator
  2. I’m Only F**king Myself by Lola Young
  3. Who Is The Sky? by David Byrne
  4. THE BPM by Sudan Archives
  5. The Life of a Showgirl by Taylor Swift
  6. moisturizer by Wet Leg
  7. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 08, 2026 /Royal Stuart
panda bear, animal collective, avey tare, deakin, geologist, beach boys, sharon van etten, kendrick lamar, sza, jack white, cheekface, black country new road, cindy lee, neon indian, washed out, toro y moi
2025, Top 31
Comment

#25 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — Tyler, The Creator

January 07, 2026 by Royal Stuart in 2025, Top 31

DON'T TAP THE GLASS by Tyler, The Creator

Tyler, The Creator, whose real name is Tyler Okonma, was likely the hardest working creator in the world in 20251. From February through September he played 96 arena shows in support of his phenomenal 2024 album CHROMAKOPIA (#12 last year) – a performance that had Tyler performing for nearly two hours solo on stage in front of audiences ranting from 12,000 to 75,000 people. During a break between one of the four 2025 legs of the tour (the fifth leg will be completed through March, 2026), he found the time to write, produce, record, and release the phenomenal DON’T TAP THE GLASS, his ninth studio album. As if that weren’t enough, towards the end of the year Okonma made his acting debut, alongside Timothée Chalamet, in Josh Safdie’s amazing period ping pong film Marty Supreme.

GLASS is a short 29 minutes long, but packed end-to-end with greatness, starting with the first song. “Big Poe,” written together with Pharrell Williams (who is also featured on the song as his alias Sk8brd – your guess is as good as mine as to what it means to be a cowriter as well as be featured on the song as one’s alias.) The song evokes LL Cool J of the early 90s, and heavily samples the song “Roked” from the Shye Ben Tzur / Johnny Greenwood / Rajasthan Express collaboration Junun (#10 in 2016).

The single “Sugar on My Tongue” (featured in the video above) is an electro hip hop groove at a fast 126 bpm that forces you to move no matter where you are. Okonma recently released a remix of the song that goes even harder: “Sugar on My Tongue (Freak Mix).” “Sucka Free,” whose chorus has the rapper catchily singing “I’m that guy, tryin’ to get my paper baby,” interpolates the freestyle rap he performed on top of Kendrick Lamar’s “Hey Now” (from last year’s #1 album, GNX) that Okonma released at the end of 2024. The fantastic video for “Stop Playing with Me” features LeBron James and the Clipse brothers, Pusha T and Malice, a clear tie back to Tyler’s recent appearance in the Clipse song “P.O.V.,” featured on their 2025 comeback album Let God Sort Em Out.

But wait, there’s more to Tyler, The Creator’s packed-to-the-gills 2025: he also released a new non-album single, on Christmas Day (the same day that Marty Supreme came out), called “Sag Harbor.” Like GLASS, it is well worth your time to check it out.

The entirety of DON’T TAP THE GLASS, along with this new song, all fit a “dance” motif, an intentional move by Tyler. The day the album came out, Okonma tweeted “more body movement,” paired with a manifesto for the album which ended with “This album was not made for sitting still, dancing driving running any type of movement is recommended to maybe understand the spirit of it. Only at at full volume.”

I’ve loved everything Tyler has made over the past few years, despite only really starting to pay attention to him when CHROMAKOPIA came out in 2024. I cannot wait to hear / see / feel what he does next.

1. Apple thinks so, too: in November 2025, Tyler, The Creator was announced as Apple Music’s Artist of the Year.↩

__________________________________________

  1. I’m Only F**king Myself by Lola Young
  2. Who Is The Sky? by David Byrne
  3. THE BPM by Sudan Archives
  4. The Life of a Showgirl by Taylor Swift
  5. moisturizer by Wet Leg
  6. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 07, 2026 /Royal Stuart
tyler the creator, clipse, malice, pusha t, kendrick lamar, timothée chalamet, tyler okonma, ll cool j, shye ben tzur, jonny greenwood, the rajasthan express, pharrell williams
2025, Top 31
Comment

#26 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — Lola Young

January 06, 2026 by Royal Stuart in 2025, Top 31

I’m Only F**king Myself by Lola Young

Lola Young, the 25-year old South London-born singer/songwriter whose third album I’m Only F**king Myself is #26 this year, follows in the same mold as Amy Winehouse and Sinead O’Connor: generation-defining artists who battled mental illness and rode a roller coaster of emotions in the public eye for all to mock and criticize. As a refresher, Winehouse was afflicted with addiction and the chaos that surrounds it, leading to her death in 2011 of alcohol toxicity at the age of 27. O’Connor had a long, tumultuous relationship with her fame, was diagnosed bipolar at 33 and suffered from the illness that led her to attempt suicide many times throughout her life before finally succumbing to it when she was 56.

Watching troubled, raw performers like Winehouse and O’Connor is a form of spectator sport, not unlike watching an F1 race solely for the major accidents and sometimes death that follows. It’s a sick transfixion, the three-car pileup on the opposite side of the highway that you can’t look away from, and it’s impossible to separate that fixation from the beauty of the songwriting.

The fame and trouble that surrounds Lola Young started early on. She was diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder and ADHD at 17, just after she was appearing on British television and winning a televised open-mic under-16 competition. She released her first EP when she was 18, and her debut album, My Mind Wanders and Sometimes Leaves Completely, at 23. Her follow-up album, This Wasn’t Meant For You, came out in 2024 and contained the single “Messy” that blasted her to the top of the charts and brought an unexpected level of scrutiny and fame that wore her down even more. (If you’ve not heard “Messy” before, I suggest pausing here and clicking the link above – it’s a fantastic, gut-wrenching song.)

Whereas the latest Taylor Swift album has lyrics that make me cringe and skip a song or two when I’m in the car with my daughter, Lola Young’s excellent third album, I’m Only F**king Myself1, has the exact opposite problem – it’s raunchy enough that I can’t listen to it in the presence of my family at all. There’s maybe two or three songs that I’d feel comfortable playing in my living room. But there’s no denying the artistry. Young has an ability to sound big and every bit the pop star you’d expect at her level, but then brings you down to earth quickly with her deeply raw, direct, and self-deprecating lyrics.

It’s interesting, learning where these unstated internal parenting lines are drawn for me and my family – Kendrick Lamar (last year’s #1 album, GNX, has been played in my house and car weekly on average for over a year now) can drop multiple expletives in every song he records, and I don’t give it a second thought. His use of “fucking” is rarely (if ever?) about the act itself. And my aversion to the use of that word in certain instances is not itself about the act of sex (I’m happy to field any and all questions that may arise around that topic with my 8-year-old), but, as I’ve learned via Lola Young, is specifically about the crude, often degrading and horrible use of the word to describe sex-without-love that gives me a visceral negative reaction. It’s similar to hearing the c-word, which also features a couple times on the album. You can call someone a cunt all day long and it won’t phase me. But if you use to refer to human anatomy, in a negative and crass way, then it hits differently.

This is a great album, but consider yourself warned. There’s an immense amount of pain and suffering spelled out in these songs, and while I truly hope Young is able to continue her career while avoiding the pitfalls of her illnesses and addictions, I fear the worst. She’s released a video for every song on the album, so there is no shortage of watching Young and learning what she’s all about. I chose “who f**king cares?” to feature above because the lone acoustic guitar and the internal-dialog-as-lyrics are exactly what I love about Young’s songwriting. But know that the rest of the album is much more raucous. I suggest starting with “Not Like That Anymore” or “d£aler” for a taste of Young at her biggest and brightest.

  1. how long will it take to walk a mile? (interlude)
  2. F**K EVERYONE
  3. One Thing
  4. d£aler
  5. SPIDERS
  6. Penny Out of Nothing
  7. Walk All Over You
  8. Post Sex Clarity
  9. SAD SOB STORY! :)
  10. CAN WE IGNORE IT? :(
  11. why do i feel better when i hurt you?
  12. Not Like That Anymore
  13. who f**king cares? (featured above)
  14. ur an absolute c word (interlude)

Find some headphones and put I’m Only F**king Myself on. You’ll be pleasantly surprised, until you start hearing the lyrics, and then you’ll likely be horrified. But if you’re like me, the juxtaposition of the two emotions mixes into a cocktail of aural greatness that will keep you engaged and coming back for more.

1. Note the asterisks in the album title are hers – I’m not censoring the title myself, the title is inherently censored by Young.↩

__________________________________________

  1. Who Is The Sky? by David Byrne
  2. THE BPM by Sudan Archives
  3. The Life of a Showgirl by Taylor Swift
  4. moisturizer by Wet Leg
  5. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 06, 2026 /Royal Stuart
lola young, amy winehouse, sinead o'connor, kendrick lamar
2025, Top 31
Comment

#27 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — David Byrne

January 05, 2026 by Royal Stuart in 2025, Top 31

Who Is The Sky? by David Byrne

David Byrne released his first album, Talking Heads: 77, with is band of the same name in 1977. Talking Heads released four albums before Byrne released his first solo project in 1981 (his beautiful collaboration with Brian Eno, My Life in the Bush of Ghosts). The band released four additional records before officially splitting up in 1991, while Byrne continued to release solo albums and soundtracks for film and theater during and after the band’s short-but-fruitful existence. All told, then man has been a part of 30 records in the 48 years he’s been releasing music.

He is a true national treasure. (Despite having been born in Scotland, Byrne has triple citizenship between Great Britain, the US, and Ireland. He’s lived in NYC for decades.) He has gifted us with his art via recorded music and a myriad of media for nearly half a century. He’s stage-directed and choreographed dances throughout his musical career (if you’ve not seen the brilliant 1984 Jonathan Demme-directed Talking Heads concert film Stop Making Sense, I highly recommended you put it at the top of your list – you will not be disappointed). He’s been the creative force behind multiple Broadway shows (The Catherine Wheel with Twyla Tharp, his own American Utopia, and a Broadway collaboration with Fatboy Slim called Here Lies Love). He’s written multiple books, on music and many other topics. Since 1990 he’s run a record label focused on bringing international sounds to a global audience, called Luaka Bop. In 2003 he toured a non-music presentation at college campuses called “I ♥ PowerPoint” that I had the pleasure of seeing live at Kane Hall at the University of Washington. He gave a TED talk in 2010. While not a true EGOT, he’s won an Oscar, a Grammy, a Tony, a Golden Globe, and has been inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

Byrne has a savant-like commitment1 to making people feel connected, happy, and loved. I’ve had the pleasure of seeing Byrne perform on stage six times since 2001, and each was filled with pure joy. One of those concerts was at Benaroya Hall, where the Seattle Symphony performs, promoting his collaboration with St. Vincent (the album, called Love This Giant, featured at #15 in 2012).

To promote his tenth solo album, the fantastic Who Is The Sky?, created in collaboration with a musical ensemble called Ghost Train Orchestra, Byrne built a stage set that saw him and 14 other musicians and dancers all performing on top of and surrounded by giant LED screens. The scenes surrounding the performers alternated through locales as varied as the surface of the moon (while playing Talking Heads’ “Heaven”), a NYC rooftop (performing “Strange Overtones” from Byrne’s second collaboration with Brian Eno, 2008’s Everything That Happens Will Happen Today), and a 360° view of the interior of Byrne’s Brooklyn apartment (while playing Who Is The Sky?’s “My Apartment is My Friend,” of course). Each song throughout the nearly 2-hour set featured choreographed dances for the entire 15-person crew, with even the musicians mobilized thanks to special mounts and harnesses for their instruments. It was magical.

Byrne’s solo music over the last 20 years has tended towards more “safe” territory than the Talking Heads ever did. “Everybody Laughs,” featured in the video above, is a prime example. There are no surprises, but there’s also nothing to dislike. Add in Byrne’s electrified presence, and you can see why why we all keep coming back. He’s released another video from the album, a black-and-white animated singalong for the song “What is the Reason For it?,” which features Hayley Williams, the lead singer of rock band Paramore. And then there’s a video for non-album track “T Shirt,” which I first heard and saw as part of the Who Is They Sky? concert.

While it doesn’t compare to the live stage show, you can get a small sense of it by watching the crew’s Tiny Desk Concert from December. They managed to fit all 15 of them behind the desk, performing a few key songs from the show.

Byrne is 73 years old, and showing no signs of slowing down. While his albums alone don’t “wow,” everything else he brings to the world more than makes for it, keeping him near the top of “must see” lists everywhere. I can’t wait to see what he can do in the second half of his century of performing.

1. Despite having never been formally diagnosed, Bryne said in 2012 that he felt that music was his way of communicating when he could not do it face-to-face “because of [his] autism”.↩

__________________________________________

  1. THE BPM by Sudan Archives
  2. The Life of a Showgirl by Taylor Swift
  3. moisturizer by Wet Leg
  4. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 05, 2026 /Royal Stuart
david byrne, talking heads, st. vincent, brian eno, hayley williams, paramore
2025, Top 31
Comment

#28 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — Sudan Archives

January 04, 2026 by Royal Stuart in Top 31, 2025

THE BPM by Sudan Archives

Pretty sure until I started the research for this post I’d never heard of anyone self-teaching themselves how to play the violin. But that’s exactly what Brittney Denise Parks did after seeing a group of fiddlers in 4th grade. After that fateful day, she asked her mom for a violin and was finally given one a year or two later.

Parks, whose stage name is Sudan Archives1, took her love of the violin from her home town of Cincinnati to Los Angeles when she was kicked out of her house after high school. Newly relocated, she started writing her own music while immersing herself in the legendary experimental hip hop and electronic music club night Low End Theory at The Airliner in the Lincoln Heights neighborhood of LA. She also started attending ethnomusicology classes at Pasadena City College, where she dove deep into the global cultural origins of stringed instruments (as one does).

Thanks to her ties at Low End Theory, she got a connection at Stones Throw Records, with whom she’s released two Sudan Archives EPs and three full-length albums. I’d heard the name Sudan Archives for years, but had never given her much consideration until a coworker (hi Maureen!) told me they were having trouble putting THE BPM down. Give it a listen, and it’s easy to hear why.

Hit play on the video above, for the song “DEAD.” Parks has taken her violin skills, the ethnomusicology education, and Low End Theory experience and combined it into what my Gen X music-loving mind wants to call “techno music.” If you listen closely, you’ll hear evidence of a violin scattered throughout the album, but at its core, this is dance music, primed to make you want to move. She’s released a few videos from the album, all generally built around the premise of Parks mugging for the camera, barely clothed. Watch “A BUG’S LIFE,” “MS. PAC MAN,” and “MY TYPE” — MS. PAC MAN is the most abrasive song on the album, with lyrics like “Put it in my mouth, then my bank account. Fuck you on the couch in my favorite blouse,” but it’s still great. You’d be hard pressed to not shake your booty to this album.

I’ve not yet listened, but from what I’ve read, the past Sudan Archives albums are every bit as good as this one. We all now have our marching orders. Let’s get out and listen, please report back your findings.

1. “My mom nicknamed me ‘Sudan,’ and that country happens to have a lot of violin music, which I thought was really cool. ‘Archives’ refers to the musicologist archives that I always try to find, but it also means if you wanna be yourself, you gotta dig deep.” – “Sudan Archives: She’s Different” article in Pitchfork, August 17, 2017↩

__________________________________________

  1. The Life of a Showgirl by Taylor Swift
  2. moisturizer by Wet Leg
  3. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 04, 2026 /Royal Stuart
sudan archives, low end theory
Top 31, 2025
Comment

#29 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — Taylor Swift

January 03, 2026 by Royal Stuart in 2025, Top 31

The Life of a Showgirl by Taylor Swift

Tay Tay continues to have a strong presence in my household. After the surprise announcement of her newest album (her twelfth) at 12:12am on Tuesday August 12, the anticipation in my wife and youngest child – both proud Swifties™ – was palpable and unavoidable. Swift has been releasing music at a breakneck pace of late (The Life of a Showgirl is her sixth album in seven years – her 11th album if you count the four “Taylor’s Version” re-recorded albums she’s release in that same time), and her team is the best in the world at maintaining momentum. Speaking as someone who knows, it’s impossible to avoid getting swept away in it all.

The Life of a Showgirl is a great album, in a long line of great albums. In spite of the pace and ever-present nature of Taylor Swift®, her songwriting continues to be second-to-none. Nobody, aside from the Beatles’ 12-album stretch from 1963-1970, has been able to maintain this level of creative output and universal acceptance.

The word “frenzy” comes to mind when I think of the release of the album, and its lead single “The Fate of Ophelia”, on October 3. Suddenly the conversation before, during, and after dinner was all about Taylor, and there were even choreographed dances being learned. “Ophelia,” the opening track on the album featured in the video above, is perfectly catchy – I listened to part of it this morning and it’s been ear wormed into my brain for the rest of the day. There are other great songs on the album, too – I’m particularly drawn to “Eldest Daughter” and “CANCELLED!”

As an almost 52-year-old man, this album wasn’t made for me. Some of the songs make me question who the intended target of Showgirl actually is. There’s always been a heavily-polished “bad girl” vibe to some of Swift’s music, especially since her 2017 album Reputation, but it’s always felt a little forced, a little out of character for the version of Taylor Swift I have in my head. Some of the songs on Showgirl take it too far, in my opinion. “I can make deals with the devil because my dick’s bigger” is a line in the album’s fourth track, “Father Figure” (George Michael’s song of the same title is better). “It’s kind of making me wet” shows up in the song “Actually Romantic” (which is apparently a diss track in response to Charli xcx). And “Wood,” the ninth song on the album, is a thinly veiled, double-entendre-laden ode to Travis Kelce’s penis. As my eight year old loudly sings the lyrics in the back of the car, I can’t help but cringe.

On the whole, Showgirl is better than her last two albums (2024’s The Tortured Poets Department and 2023’s Midnights) neither of which made the Top 31, and not nearly as good as her two 2020 albums, Folklore and Evermore, that collectively ranked #4 in that year’s Top 31. But I don’t need to convince you to listen to this new record, as I’m sure you already have. It’s unavoidable.

__________________________________________

  1. moisturizer by Wet Leg
  2. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 03, 2026 /Royal Stuart
taylor swift, sabrina carpenter
2025, Top 31
Comment

#30 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — Wet Leg

January 02, 2026 by Royal Stuart in 2025, Top 31

moisturizer by Wet Leg

A lot can happen in three years. Wet Leg, the duo out of Isle of Wight in Great Britain, had an insane blast-out-of-a-cannon year in 2022. Shortly after their self-titled debut album came in at #8 in 2022 on the Top 31, they won Best Alternative Music Album at the Grammys and Best New Artist and Best British Group at the Brit Awards.

Since then, Rhian Teasdale (vocals, guitar) and Hester Chambers (guitar) have expanded the band outwards to a fully-fledged group of five, adding Henry Holmes (drums), Josh Mobaraki (rhythm guitar, synths) and Ellis Durand (bass). Together, they’ve put together an unexpectedly great sophomore album called moisturizer, demonstrating they’re not going to be labeled as one-hit wonders, held back by the insane success of their debut single “Chaise Longue.”

To my ears, there’s a straight line from their debut album to moisturizer. The same soft and loud vocals, mixed with a boisterous attack in their songwriting can be found on both albums. It feels odd to use the words “unexpectedly great” yet place the album all the way back at #30 for the year. I have enjoyed listening to this album since it came out in July, but it hasn’t had the draw of quite a few other albums. But I accept that my personal take on the album isn’t the only one available — KEXP listeners voted moisturizer their #1 album of 2025.

They’ve released quite a few videos for the album, most of which have a sameness that mirrors the music: Teasdale front and center, dressed in a bikini top and short shorts, singing in slow motion while mugging for the camera (see “CPR”, “catch these fists”, “mangetout,” and “pokemon”). Of that group of videos, “pokemon” at least has a narrative that breaks the mold a bit, but it’s the video for “davina mccall” that I’ve featured above that is entirely different – stop motion animation for the win! That song has the added benefit of being a stand-out from the rest – allowing Teasdale to stretch her vocal range in a more bubbly pop wrapper.

If you’re not ready to commit fully to the band, I recommend you check out their live performance at the KEXP from September. They play the four singles featured in the videos I link above, and it plainly shows the fantastic musicianship of the new members of the band. And it gives you a good taste of what they’re capable of. You’re going to like it.

__________________________________________

  1. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 02, 2026 /Royal Stuart
wet leg
2025, Top 31
Comment

#31 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — Nine Inch Nails

January 01, 2026 by Royal Stuart in Top 31, 2025

Welcome to the 17th annual Bacon Top 31. A quick primer to anyone new here: the Top 31 is my personal blogging platform. I post primarily in January. Every day throughout the month, I’ll count down my favorite albums of the previous year, starting at #31 and ending in my favorite album of that year. There is no committee, no group consensus — this is the culmination of a year’s worth of listening by one aging caucasian Gen-X man.

When I started the Top 31 in 2009, my first child had been born the year before. The expansion of my family didn’t affect my love of music, but the additional mouth to feed hit my family’s bank account in a way that forced me to be more innovative in how I consumed music. I began acquiring most of my music for free (via mp3s) and maintained my live-show diet by getting in for free thanks to my local music blogging credentials. Along with all the free music, a sense of guilt began to fester inside me – I was enjoying all this great artistry but giving basically nothing back to the artists.

Fate intervened, and presented an opportunity for me to alleviate a lot of that guilt: a close friend of mine (hi Ryan!) had been running his own version of a Musical Advent Calendar in the 00’s, and when the effort exceeded his available time, he decided to call it quits with his 2008 list. There was nobody in my circle picking up the slack, so after clearing it with him first, I started up where he left off. I put my own spin on the idea (for one, I expanded from his more traditional 24 advent days to a larger 31 days of the month), bought the URL baconreview.com, and in December of 2009 the Bacon Top 31 was born.1

17 years later, I’m still here, avidly collecting new music throughout the year, taking in everything I can like a sponge with ears, and then ranking and writing about the artists and albums I’ve loved. The guilt that drove my output in 2009 is no longer there – I spend plenty in support of the artists I listen to, through streaming and vinyl and concerts (just ask my lovely, supportive wife). Today, I share the Top 31 purely out of love — I want you to read, listen to and ultimately fall in love with the albums and artists like I have. And if the artists get some form of additional kickback, all the better. Music sustains us, we sustain music.

Let this year’s spreading of the love of music begin…

TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

We start the 2025 Bacon Top 31 with an artist whose debut album came out 36 years ago. I’m fairly certain Nine Inch Nails need no formal introduction. But if you’ve not really paid much attention (like me) to Trent Reznor’s movements over the last 20-30 years, let me give you a quick refresher.

Since releasing Pretty Hate Machine in 1989 (!), Reznor has become quite the auteur. He’s released 14 Nine Inch Nails albums and, together with his writing partner Atticus Ross, he’s created the soundtracks for 21 films. The latest Reznor / Ross soundtrack, for 2025’s TRON: Ares, marks the first time they’ve applied the band name Nine Inch Nails to a soundtrack, implying that until now, all previous soundtracks were not worthy of the NIN name.

I concur: their soundtrack to TRON: Ares feels very much like a Nine Inch Nails from my youth. Prior to this album, I think the last NIN album I listened to and actually enjoyed was 1999’s Fragile. Consequently, despite having released multiple NIN albums since 2009, none of those were worthy of the Top 31. In fact, the only time Reznor has appeared on the Top 31 at all was as a collaborator on a couple songs on Fever Ray’s last album, Radical Romantics (#10 back in 2023). I even saw Nine Ince Nails perform on stage in 2014 (with Soundgarden opening!), and yet nothing recorded was hitting me quite like PHM or The Downward Spiral.

Ares is a return to form for Reznor and Ross. This feels like the Nine Inch Nails I loved in the 90’s. Click play on the video above, for the song “As Alive As You Need Me To Be.” So good! I can’t say if the movie is any good, but I am glad to know that should I see it, I’ll at least be entertained by the soundtrack.

1. I’m stretching the truth slightly. The url I bought in 2009 was for royalbacon.com, which I’ve not done anything with. I didn’t buy baconreview.com until January 2011, after two years of hosting my blog on tumblr. This is why the earliest posts on baconreview.com (that I migrated over from blogspot) have different formatting and poorly-managed cross-posting links.↩

__________________________________________

There are many ways to listen to the 2025 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as they are revealed on the countdown!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 01, 2026 /Royal Stuart
nine inch nails, trent reznor, fever ray, atticus ross
Top 31, 2025
Comment

#1 on the 2024 Bacon Top 31 — Kendrick Lamar

January 31, 2025 by Royal Stuart in Top 31, 2024

GNX by Kendrick Lamar

There was a noticeable shift in my music listening in 2024. I used to be a dabbler in hip hop and rap, enjoying it from time-to-time but putting it in my speakers infrequently. This year those habits changed. What was a low percentage of my overall listening became a majority, especially in the latter half of the year. I attribute that shift to one man: Kendrick Lamar. No musician — in any genre — commanded my attention more in 2024 than he did. And that shift is carrying into 2025, as we are just over a week out from Lamar’s performance on the Super Bowl LIX stage on February 9, 2024. I couldn’t be more excited.

GNX, Kendrick Lamar’s sixth album, dropped unexpectedly on November 22, 2024. It is a great album, and taken without any of the additional context I’m about to share below, it would likely have been my #1 album of 2024 anyway – but I obviously can’t know for sure. I will dive into the merits of the album from my (decidedly naive, considering it’s hip-hop) perspective in a bit. But first, I must share the additional context.

Prior to the release of GNX, hip hop was already dominating my 2024, thanks in part to Doechii’s Alligator Bites Never Heal, released on Aug 24 (#18) and Tyler, the Creator’s CHROMAKOPIA, released on October 28 (#12), but mostly due to Kendrick, who had a seminal verse on one track and subsequently released five non-album singles between March and September 2024. If we had gotten to the end of the year without an official album from him, I would have been put in the very strange position of having listened to a lot of new music in 2024 by and because of an artist despite them not having released an album. I don’t know what I would have done, because I feel so compelled to capture Kendrick Lamar’s 2024 in my own words, so I can better understand it, and I can pass that understanding on to you (whether you wanted it or not). Here goes nothing.

Where’s The Beef?

You may have heard of The Beef. Not the TV show (although it was enjoyable), but the escalating series of events, the rap feud if you will, between Drake and Kendrick Lamar. It was this feud, the way it played out, the speed at which both artists recorded and released music, and how the feud resolved (or continues to resolve) itself that I found intensely engrossing. Drake, the Canadian rapper very close to being the most popular musician in the world (I believe he is #2 only to Taylor Swift’s #1 all-time streaming record), versus Kendrick Lamar, the Pulitzer-prize winning incendiary West Coast Compton-born rapper.

At its core, the beef is about what makes a rapper legitimate. That, in and of itself, has been a long-time rap staple — if you didn’t grow up in the hood, if you haven’t been somehow related to gang violence or had to successfully avoid it to survive, then you aren’t deserving of any stature in the rap world. Of course this kind of base thinking doesn’t only happen in rap, but I would argue it comes up more prominently here than in any other genre. That is the foundation upon which The Beef is built: that Lamar believes Drake is a poseur, and his unprecedented popularity has taken the rap industry down the wrong path. His hyper-polished, overproduced, and sanitized music, his non-American nationality, and even how he carries himself, do not represent rap how it should be represented in popular music. He has caused the rap industry on the whole to sour, and something needs to be done about it.

And Kendrick is not entirely wrong in this stance, but you have to squint at the numbers to have it make sense. In 2018, hip hop became the streaming world’s #1 genre, thanks to both men, but Drake much more than Kendrick. Since then, it has remained the #1 genre, but until 2024 that buffer that had been built up between hip hop and other genres had been slowly declining. Taylor and her minions likely had a lot to do with that shift away from hip hop. But in 2024, thanks to Kendrick going on the offensive, calling out Drake and the industry on the whole over the course of a year, he drew my and a whole slew of other people’s attention back to (or for the first time to) the genre. Hip hop’s popularity climbed back up to a commanding lead in 2024.1 Carrying the weight of an entire genre on your shoulders back to greatness is itself a feat to be recognized. Now let’s talk about how he did that.

Where The Beef Began

Drake and Kendrick have a long history together, and it started out on a positive note when Lamar featured on Drake’s “Buried Alive Interlude” in 2011. 2013 saw the first lyrical shots fired between the men, when Kendrick rapped on Big Sean’s “Control” that he had love for Drake and a number of other popular rappers at that time, but he wanted to “murder” them when it came to rap. A couple weeks later, Drake’s response came in an interview when he said “I know good and well that [Lamar]’s not murdering me, at all, in any platform.” Over the next ten or so years, there were various lines that they both delivered in verse and in interviews that, while not overt, were interpreted as “sneak disses.” 

In October, 2023, Drake and J. Cole released “First Person Shooter,” in which J. Cole states that he, Drake, and Kendrick are the “Big Three” greatest rappers in modern hip-hop. This was apparently the start of the end for Kendrick, who disliked being lumped together with the other two as “the greatest” – not only because he considered himself, alone, to be the sole title holder for “greatest,” which I feel he has a legitimate claim to, but also because J. Cole had the audacity to claim that Cole and Drake were “the greatest” in any capacity. Kendrick’s official response came five months later, with a verse on his, Future, and Metro Boomin’s single “Like That,” in which Kendrick raps “Motherfuck the big three, n****, it’s just big me,” elevating himself above Drake and Cole. Innocent enough as a diss, but knowing the history behind it and Lamar’s intent to not only boost himself but to also cut down Drake is key.2

Full-blown Diss Tracks

Drake took the bait, creating the first complete song in The Beef whose sole focus was to take down the other man. “Push Ups” first leaked online on April 13, with Drake claiming many artists are better than Kendrick, including 21 Savage, Travis Scott, and SZA. On top of that, he made fun of Lamar’s physical presence, saying, “How the fuck you big-steppin’ with a size-seven men’s on?” and calling him “your little midget ass.” Lamar is only 5' 5", and I’m sorry, it’s all fun and games until you make fun of something out of a person’s control, like their height. That’s below the belt, and believe that likely went a long way to push Kendrick over the edge. But Drake felt he had the upper hand, looking down from his mountain, so he took the shot. “And that fuckin’ song y’all got did not start the beef with us. This shit been brewin’ in a pot, now I’m heatin’ up.”

Six days later, the official version of “Push Ups” came out, along with a second song, “Taylor Made Freestyle.” The latter song featured unauthorized AI versions of Tupac and Snoop Dogg dissing Kendrick, as well as a diss on Kendrick’s ties to the music industry in general, claiming that those ties were keeping Kendrick from responding to the leaked “Push Ups” because he didn’t want to interfere with the concurrent release of Taylor Swift’s The Tortured Poets Department, which also came out on April 19 (hence the “Taylor” in the name of the song). Tupac’s estate threatened to sue Drake, stating their support for Kendrick in their response: “The unauthorized, equally dismaying use of Tupac’s voice against Kendrick Lamar… who has given nothing but respect to Tupac and his legacy publicly and privately, compounds the insult.” Drake took the song down from streaming services a week later.

After two unanswered songs calling him out, Kendrick finally responded in full on April 30, with “Euphoria.” At 1,400 words, the 6+ minute track is non-stop hit-after-hit on Drake. Lamar calls Drake a bad father, raising his son poorly. And that his abs are fake. But more importantly, he makes the first real dig at Drake’s legitimacy in the rap business. “How many more fairytale stories ’bout your life ’til we had enough? How many more black features ’til you finally feel that you’re black enough? I like Drake with the melodies, I don’t like Drake when he act tough.” He goes on, “I hate the way that you walk, the way that you talk, I hate the way that you dress… I even hate when you say the word “n****,” but that's just me, I guess.” The song ends with a repeated refrain “We don’t wanna hear you say ‘n****’ no more.”

Five Songs Across Five Days

From there, with Kendrick having released a verse, Drake two songs, and then Kendrick with one song over the span of just over a month, the creative output and nastiness of the disses kicked into high gear. Over the next five days, Drake released two more songs, and Kendrick three, volleying back and forth with deeper, more scathing digs without sacrificing musical quality (at least on Kendrick’s part, but I’m biased by this point). On May 3, Kendrick followed up “Euphoria” with “6:16 in LA” – mocking a common Drake song-title structure – non-coincidentally produced by none other than Jack Antonoff (one of Taylor Swift’s lead producers). The instagram-only track is not as overt as “Euphoria,” instead choosing to target Drake’s OVO Records crew and Drake’s penchant for internet memes as more fodder for why he’s not street enough.

14 hours after “6:16,” Drake released “Family Matters” and proceeded to go ballistic. At 1,700 words and 7.5 minute in length, the song is the longest, most dense track in The Beef. Drake not only calls out Lamar, he lashes out at many other well-known artists like Future, Rick Ross, A$AP Rocky, Kanye West, producers Metro Boomin’ and Pharrell Williams, and singer the Weeknd. He pushed things further into chaos by claiming Kendrick was a domestic abuser against his wife, Whitney Alford. “On some Bobby shit, I wanna know what Whitney need,” comparing Lamar to Bobby Brown attacking Whitney Houston. He claimed one of Kendrick’s kids may actually be fathered by producer and filmmaker Dave Free (a point which becomes more relevant later on).

20 minutes later, Kendrick’s “meet the grahams” hit YouTube. Drake’s last name is Graham, so you can see where this is going. Less song and more spoken-word poem, it starts “Dear Adonis, I’m sorry that that man is your father,” Lamar makes it very personal by speaking directly to Drake’s son. “I look at him and wish your grandpa woulda wore a condom. I’m sorry that you gotta grow up and then stand behind him.” Then he addresses Drake’s parents, Sandra and Dennis. “You raised a horrible fuckin’ person, the nerve of you, Dennis. Sandra, sit down, what I’m about to say is heavy, now listen. Mm-mh, your son’s a sick man with sick thoughts, I think n****s like him should die. Him and Weinstein should get fucked up in a cell for the rest they life.” Just brutal.

He goes on, claiming Drake has a secret daughter. In the final verse, addressed directly at Drake, Lamar explains why he’s cutting so deep. “This supposed to be a good exhibition within the game. But you fucked up the moment you called out my family's name. Why you had to stoop so low to discredit some decent people? Guess integrity is lost when the metaphors don't reach you.”

The Death Blow

The next morning, roughly 14 hours after the previous song, Lamar releases the piece de resistance, “Not Like Us.” A classic right out of the gate, the song famously features production by Mustard (whose birth name is Dijon McFarlane – get it?). It became the song of the summer, and was hands down my favorite song of 2024. It is four minutes and 33 seconds of straight-up bliss.

The song picks up the story where “meet the grahams” left off, diving further into filth. He calls Drake a pedophile, rapping “Say, Drake, I hear you like ’em young. You better not ever go to cell block one.” and “Why you trollin’ like a bitch? Ain’t you tired? Tryna strike a chord and it’s probably A minorrrrrr.” (I cannot wait for that line to be sung by literally everyone at the Super Bowl.) Not stopping there, he raps “And Baka got a weird case, why is he around? Certified Lover Boy? Certified pedophiles” – naming Baka, a member of Drake’s security team who had been, according to Wikipedia, legitimately arrested and charged with sex trafficking, assault, and robbery of a 22-year-old woman he allegedly forced into prostitution in 2014 (but was only convicted of assault and a weapons charge), and name dropping Drake’s Lover Boy album.

He then refers back to a line Drake had in “Family Matters” where Drake said “Always rappin’ like you ’bout to get the slaves freed,” flipping it around. He accuses Drake of exploiting Atlanta-based artists for his own gain, akin to slavery. He runs through a litany of Atlanta stars who have guest appeared on Drake’s songs, including Future, 21 Savage, and 2 Chainz. The final verse ends with “You run to Atlanta when you need a few dollars. No, you not a colleague, you a fuckin’ colonizer.”

After that pinnacle of a song, Drake followed up the next day with the lackluster effort “The Heart Part 6” – mimicking Lamar’s “The Heart” song series titling. In the song, Drake goes fully on the defensive, denying he’s a pedophile a handful of times, and that he doesn’t have a hidden daughter, giving legitimacy to lines that were clearly not realistic when they were first rapped by Lamar, but now elevated to new heights by having been acknowledged by Drake. He should have left well enough alone, or picked new roads to go down. Instead, Drake continued attacking Lamar with the domestic violence and illegitimate fatherhood notes from previous songs.

Not only had Kendrick released the phenomenal “Not Like Us” just 24 hours earlier, “The Heart Part 6” was widely panned, hitting an ignominious 1 million dislikes achievement on YouTube. The general consensus is that this is where Drake unequivocally lost The Beef. Kendrick had proven his lyrical and musical prowess, and Drake had to move on. Of course things didn’t really end there, and it has yet to prove if it has had any material affect on Drake’s popularity, but it has certainly helped Kendrick achieve greater heights. And he is not letting anyone forget it.

Begin the Victory Laps

Kendrick hosted a concert on Juneteenth – another indirect slavery dig at Drake – called “The Pop Out: Ken & Friends.” The concert lasted over three hours, and featured over 25 West Coast artists, including Tyler, the Creator. It was split into three “& Friends” sets, with DJ Hed leading the first set: a showcase of up-and-coming LA rappers. Act II was led by Mustard and featured a long set of Mustard-produced tracks with special guests singing their own songs. Act III was Kendrick’s time to shine. He opened with “Euphoria” with some new lyrics dissing Drake, and proceeded to play other Drake diss tracks “Like That” and “6:16 in LA.” After 15 songs, with Jay Rock, Ab-Soul, and ScHoolboy Q all making appearances, Kendrick brought Dr. Dre out on stage to perform “Still D.R.E” and “California Love,” which Dre had performed originally with 2Pac. Dr. Dre then got the crowd to quiet down, and whispered the opening line to “Not Like Us” – “Psst, I see dead people.” Which led to Kendrick performing “Not Like Us“ five times back to back, each with a little bit different set of flair.

On the 4th of July, Kendrick released the music video for “Not Like Us,” which featured at the beginning of it a snippet of a then-unknown song, later to be revealed as the fantastic “Squabble Up” from GNX, shown in the video at the top of this post. The “Not Like Us” video notably celebrates West Coast and LA rappers. It closes the door on the accusations made by Drake across a few of his diss tracks by showing Kendrick’s entire family happily dancing together in the video, and having the video co-directed by none other than Dave Free.

On September 11, Kendrick released an untitled, Instagram-exclusive song that has come to be known as “Watch the Party Die.” In it, he references The Beef, but does not overtly diss Drake, concentrating instead on the cultural relevance of influencers, materialism, and celebrity culture on the hip hop industry in general. It was posted at 8pm, just when the 2024 Video Music Awards were starting, likely intentionally calling out the award ceremony.

And that is Kendrick Lamar’s 2024, up to the release of GNX on November 22. But first, to give full consideration of The Beef up to current day: Drake is not ready to give up. On November 25, Drake filed a petition against Universal Music Group and Spotify, claiming they had conspired to artificially inflate the popularity of “Not Like Us.” A day later, Drake filed a 2nd petition against UMG, claiming defamation for them not having stopped the release of a song falsely accusing him of being a sex offender, as well as UMG creating an illegal payola scheme with iHeartRadio. On January 14 of this year, Drake dropped the petition against UMG and Spotify, but the defamation claim remains. A day later, Drake filed a formal lawsuit against UMG, “the music company that decided to publish, promote, exploit, and monetize allegations (in “Not Like Us”) that it understood were not only false, but dangerous.” It is not likely the active lawsuit will keep Lamar from playing the song at the Super Bowl, but it does make the upcoming experience a little bit contentious and exciting.

What Were We Talking About? Oh Yeah, GNX.

On the morning of November 22, around 8:30am PST, Lamar released “GNX,” a one-minute video without any description, and ending in a simple white-on-black treatment of the letters “GNX.” The snippet of song in the video has not appeared in any other recording from Lamar, giving clear indication that there is still more to come (maybe before the Super Bowl?). Thirty minutes after the release of the video, the album GNX hit streaming services, and within 20 minutes of the release I’d seen a notification somewhere and was downloading the album to immediately put in my ears. Having watched all of The Beef happen in near real time, I was more than primed for the album’s majesty, and it did not disappoint.

From my untrained ears, GNX is more approachable, and simpler, than Lamar’s past efforts. Aside from the names mentioned elsewhere in this novel of a post, GNX was mainly produced by Sounwave and Jack Antonoff (he’s everywhere), to great affect. I didn’t have Lamar’s first two albums (2011 and 2012) on the Top 31. All of his other albums have made an appearance, from To Pimp a Butterfly at #29 in 2015, DAMN. at #22 in 2017, Black Panther: The Album at #21 in 2018, and finally Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers at #16 in 2022. All of them are masterpieces in their own way, but none of them have been a mainstay in my daily listening like GNX has been.

It is a perfectly sequenced album. The first track “wacced out murals,” references The Beef a few times, but chooses to rise above the direct attacks on Drake, choosing instead to put everyone to task. “It used to be ’Fuck that n****,’ but now it’s plural. Fuck everybody.” He gets straight to the point, intentionally. “This is not for lyricists, I swear it’s not the sentiments. Fuck a double entendre, I wan’t ya’ll to feel this shit.” No more beating around the bush.

From there, Kendrick goes into the bouncy “squabble up,” which starts with the fantastic line “Woke up lookin’ for the broccoli, high-key, keep a horn on me, that Kamasi,” referencing Kamasi Washington, an American jazz saxophonist who also has production credits on the album. Rhyming “broccoli” with “Kamasi,” how can you not smile? The third song, “luther” is a beautiful, slow duet with SZA (#7 in 20223), evoking similar feelings to “All the Stars,” their duet on the Black Panther Soundtrack.

“Man at the garden” is the fourth song from the album. It’s a slower, downbeat song that Lamar uses to give a complete and thorough description of why he is deserving of any and all accolades that are directed at him. He refers to The Beef, ending the song with a very impassioned “Tell me why you think you deserve the greatest of all time, motherfucker.” Song 5, “hey now (feat. Dody6)” gives me my favorite guest appearance of the album. The song starts with Kendrick rapping in the low register. Over the song he slowly gains volume and energy, climbing an octave and driving more anxiety as he does it. When Dody6, an up-and-coming West Coast LA rapper, joins the fray, his delivery is entirely unique. There’s a laid-back Snoop quality to his bars, but with an urgency underlying it all that is all his own. I will be looking out for more work by him.

The sixth song, “reincarnated,” is the heart of the album. In it, Kendrick draws connections to past extreme rises in fame paired with self-destruction, telling the stories of (without naming) John Lee Hooker and Billie Holiday before turning the magnifying glass on himself, all in an attempt to keep his own extracurriculars in check. The song culminates in a crazy back and forth where Kendrick is talking to God, voiced by himself. “tv off (feat. Lefty Gunplay)” is a high energy song that gave the world “MUSTAAAAARRRRD,” that I’m sure you’ve heard many times by now.

“Dodger blue (feat. Wallie the Senset, Siete7x, and Roddy Ricch)” slows things down again, with a 90s-esque R&B slide beat that will have you boppin. “peekaboo (feat. AzChike)” is an odd outlier that is deceivingly simple, repeating “What they talkin’ ’bout? They ain’t talkin’ ’bout nothin’” over and over again, with a few other lines that start with the word “peekaboo.” Still, it is an addictive listen.

“Heart pt. 6” (where Kendrick reclaims the title of the song back from Drake), marks the first time he includes a song from the series of The Heart songs on a proper full-length album. It is beautiful. The next song, the title song, featuring Hitta J3, YoungThreat, & Peysoh, is carried by a back-masked beat that drives the song quietly forward while the lesser-named kids take a chance at the rhymes. The twelfth, and last, song on the album, “gloria,” is another duet with SZA. The two of them have such clear chemistry musically, and this song is no different.

It’s been announced that SZA will be appearing in the Super Bowl Halftime show with Kendrick, as well as double-billing with him on their summertime stadium tour. I cannot wait to see what else the future holds for Kendrick Lamar that we’ll get to enjoy. It’s all but a given that there’s another album coming this year. And seeing he and SZA live on stage in May here in Seattle is going to be huge. Maybe something more will come from Drake’s lawsuits, who knows. But one thing is for sure, I’m now a fully committed Kendrick Lamar fan, and I’m here for whatever he brings next. Thanks for reading along.

1. I’m sorry I can’t point you to the exact data points I’m referencing – I swear I read exactly what I’m reporting here recently, but I can’t for the life of me find that reference now. Nonetheless, it makes for a good story, so I’m sticking with it.↩
2. On April 5, J. Cole was the first to respond to Lamar’s dig, on his own “7 Minute Drill.” In it, Cole blasts Kendrick’s album To Pimp a Butterfly, among other things. But two days later, Cole publicly apologized onstage for releasing the song and removed it from streaming services, effectively removing himself from the building melee. ↩
3. On December 20, SZA released a new deluxe version of her stellar 2022 album SOS, called LANA, featuring 15 new tracks added to the front of the album, and including a duet with Kendrick Lamar.↩

__________________________________________

  1. Tigers Blood by Waxahatchee
  2. Only God Was Above Us by Vampire Weekend
  3. Cowboy Carter by Beyoncé
  4. Revelator and Oh, Canada Soundtrack by Phosphorescent
  5. Call A Doctor by Girl and Girl
  6. Diamond Jubilee by Cindy Lee
  7. It’s Sorted by Cheekface
  8. Manning Fireworks by MJ Lenderman
  9. Hit Me Hard and Soft by Billie Eilish
  10. Clouds In The Sky They Will Always Be There For Me by Porridge Radio
  11. CHROMAKOPIA by Tyler, The Creator
  12. Dot by Vulfmon
  13. Always Happy to Explode by Sunset Rubdown
  14. Songs Of A Lost World by The Cure
  15. TANGK by IDLES
  16. My Method Actor by Nilüfer Yanya
  17. Alligator Bites Never Heal by Doechii
  18. No Name by Jack White
  19. Flight b741 by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
  20. As It Ever Was, So It Will Be Again by The Decemberists
  21. Cutouts and Wall of Eyes by The Smile
  22. Below a Massive Dark Land by Naima Bock
  23. Mahashmashana by Father John Misty
  24. Strawberry Hotel by Underworld
  25. Faith Crisis Pt 1 by Middle Kids
  26. Romance by Fontaines D.C.
  27. Here in the Pitch by Jessica Pratt
  28. Brand On The Run / Our Brand Could Be Yr Life by BODEGA
  29. People Who Aren’t There Anymore by Future Islands
  30. White Roses, My God by Alan Sparhawk

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 31, 2025 /Royal Stuart
kendrick lamar, drake, sza, dody6, dr. dre, snoop dogg, tupac, tyler the creator, jack antonoff, taylor swift, mustard, 2 chainz, doechii, 21 savage, future, rick ross, a$ap rocky, kanye west, metro boomin, pharrell williams, the weeknd, bobby brown, whitney houston, travis scott, j cole, big sean
Top 31, 2024
Comment

#2 on the 2024 Bacon Top 31 — Waxahatchee

January 30, 2025 by Royal Stuart in Top 31, 2024

Tigers Blood by Waxahatchee

It is surprisingly difficult to reread my review of Waxahatchee’s last album, Saint Cloud, my #1 album of 2020. That album came out March 27 that year, just as the world was locking down. This was the first year of Covid, with (only) 400,000 deaths. Saint Cloud was the blanket that kept us warm, the unexpectedly bright star in that darkness. 2024 wasn’t nearly as dark, as Covid is mostly controlled, having left the world scarred and scared. And here as I write this at the end of January 2025, we’re in a different kind of dark times, unsure where the world is headed. “Unsettled,” as a vibe.

We’re so lucky to have Katie Crutchfield and her band to help prop us up and give us the energy we need to carry on. Like Katie to her sister Alison, Tigers Blood is very much a twin to Saint Cloud. Crutchfield brought back Brad Cook to produce the album (he also plays bass on every song aside from one). His ability to bring the coziness of the recording space into these songs is impeccable as always. You could easily play both albums back to back and have no real indication where one album ends and the other begins, aside from one notable exception: the backing vocals of one MJ Lenderman.

You may recall Lenderman, whose recent solo album was featured at #9 this year. His dry drawl is a perfect lower-register match to Crutchfield’s strong twang. Lenderman’s guitar appears across every song on the album, and he provides exquisite harmonies on four of them, often singing an unexpected harmonic tone underneath but not hidden from the forefront. The first single from the album, “Right Back To It” has Lenderman’s voice so prominent that he received a “ft. MJ Lenderman” credit in the song title. Released just over two months before the album came out, it was a strong indication of where Waxahatchee was headed.

Another highlight of Lenderman’s backing vocals is the “title song,” a slow, depressing-in-a-good-way dirge that ends with the entire band lending their voices to the chorus. I challenge you to zone in on Lenderman’s voice when you can pick it up underneath Crutchfield. The choices he makes for the harmony line are entirely unique and surprising. It makes me want to go back and give his band Wednesday’s 2023 album Rat Saw God another proper listen.

The highlight for me on the album is also the most sparse, “365.” I first truly fell for Waxahatchee on her song “Chapel of Pines” from the 2018 EP Great Thunder. It’s a simple song, just an acoustic guitar and Crutchfield’s strong, dripping-with-emotion voice planted firmly in your ear. This is where Waxahatchee shines brightest, when she is at her most intimate. “365” is similar in tone – simple acoustic baritone guitar from Brad Cook, organ from his brother Phil, Lenderman on a second acoustic guitar, and drummer (and Jeff Tweedy’s son) Spencer Tweedy playing a lone cymbal, everything drawn back to let Crutchfield’s voice proceed unhindered. The song is a gut punch, describing a person whose whole being is wrapped up in their broken-beyond-repair partner:

“I catch your poison arrow. I catch your same disease. Bow like a weeping willow, buc-kle-in’ at the knees, beg-gin’ you ‘please.’ If you fly up beyond the cosmos, it’s a long way to fall back down. Ya always go ’bout this the wrong way, and I’m too weak to just let you drown. So when you kill, I kill, When you ache, I ache. We both haunt this ol’ lifeless town When you fail, I fail When you fly, I fly, And it’s a long way to come back down.”

Crutchfield’s own voice doubles up her lead vocals, going up even higher on the verse above. It is such an unbelievably wrenching baring of emotion, you can feel throughout your entire being this person’s anguish at being stuck in this situation.

There is not a bad song on Tigers Blood. You can watch videos for the much more amped up and rocking “Bored,” evoking sounds of Rilo Kiley1, and the more traditional slow country “Much Ado About Nothing.” Better yet, you should watch Waxahatchee’s latest “NPR Tiny Desk Concert” from December, 2024. This is their third appearance in the series, having appeared back in 2013, young, solo on guitar, and rough around the edges, and again with a special “Tiny Desk (Home) Concert” in April 2020, with her boyfriend Kevin Morby (another Top 31 alum – #3 in 20222).

Waxahatchee has been on a massive wave since I started following them shortly after the release of their 2018 EP. The audience keeps getting bigger, and Crutchfield’s reach keeps getting wider. This year she’s been nominated for a Grammy, for best Americana album. The category is full of names I don’t recognize, aside from the heavy hitter T. Bone Burnett, who I imagine would be a lock with the Grammy voters. But maybe we’ll be able to see Katie sharing that stage with Beyoncé or Taylor Swift or Kendrick Lamar on February 2. If not, I’m fairly certain this won’t be her only opportunity. Here’s to looking forward to the next one!

1. I’ve learned today that Rilo Kiley, led by Top 31 alum Jenny Lewis (#24 in 2014) is reuniting and touring this summer – I’m going to assume Waxahatchee leading the currently indie rock scene into alt.country heaven is what has made that happen.↩
2. Crutchfield showed up in 2022 as well, as half of the duo Plains with Jess Williamson on their fantastic I Walked With You a Ways at #13.↩

__________________________________________

  1. Only God Was Above Us by Vampire Weekend
  2. Cowboy Carter by Beyoncé
  3. Revelator and Oh, Canada Soundtrack by Phosphorescent
  4. Call A Doctor by Girl and Girl
  5. Diamond Jubilee by Cindy Lee
  6. It’s Sorted by Cheekface
  7. Manning Fireworks by MJ Lenderman
  8. Hit Me Hard and Soft by Billie Eilish
  9. Clouds In The Sky They Will Always Be There For Me by Porridge Radio
  10. CHROMAKOPIA by Tyler, The Creator
  11. Dot by Vulfmon
  12. Always Happy to Explode by Sunset Rubdown
  13. Songs Of A Lost World by The Cure
  14. TANGK by IDLES
  15. My Method Actor by Nilüfer Yanya
  16. Alligator Bites Never Heal by Doechii
  17. No Name by Jack White
  18. Flight b741 by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
  19. As It Ever Was, So It Will Be Again by The Decemberists
  20. Cutouts and Wall of Eyes by The Smile
  21. Below a Massive Dark Land by Naima Bock
  22. Mahashmashana by Father John Misty
  23. Strawberry Hotel by Underworld
  24. Faith Crisis Pt 1 by Middle Kids
  25. Romance by Fontaines D.C.
  26. Here in the Pitch by Jessica Pratt
  27. Brand On The Run / Our Brand Could Be Yr Life by BODEGA
  28. People Who Aren’t There Anymore by Future Islands
  29. White Roses, My God by Alan Sparhawk

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 30, 2025 /Royal Stuart
waxahatchee, katie crutchfield, mj lenderman, brad cook, wednesday, rilo kiley, jenny lewis, kevin morby, t. bone burnett, beyonce, taylor swift, kendrick lamar, jess williamson, plains
Top 31, 2024
Comment
  • Newer
  • Older

Powered by Squarespace