No one could blame you for not staying on top of new music this year — with the sheer amount dropping weekly, you'd need a full-time job to keep up. This list is a tiny consolation prize, a guide to great music that you may have missed from both touring artists such as Charli XCX and local favorites like Paper Foxes. We hope it makes you feel better about your listening habits in 2024.
Omni, ‘Souvenir’
This Atlanta trio's spent a few years honing their precise but potent take on post-punk. "Souvenir" is Omni swinging for the fences, coming off more cool, compelling and wholly inventive thanks to a few gimmicks and an injection of '80s-style goodness. Omni are also tighter and more daring as they further rely on their favorite power chords and leather jacket swag. It's the dawn of a new era, and one where they're stepping out of the basement and into the realm of big-time rock.
Omni, ‘Souvenir’
This Atlanta trio's spent a few years honing their precise but potent take on post-punk. "Souvenir" is Omni swinging for the fences, coming off more cool, compelling and wholly inventive thanks to a few gimmicks and an injection of '80s-style goodness. Omni are also tighter and more daring as they further rely on their favorite power chords and leather jacket swag. It's the dawn of a new era, and one where they're stepping out of the basement and into the realm of big-time rock.
Charli xcx, ‘Brat’
You had to have your head stuck under a rock to have missed "Brat Summer." XCX did some clever, inventive things on the way to having the year's definitive pop album: holding her own during a Billie Eilish duet ("Guess"), forging a viral TikTok that was genuinely cool ("Apple") and spoofing celebrity "culture" with a proper electro jam ("Von Dutch"). All that was possible because XCX never settled, bridging the divide between Top 40 and underground music with spontaneity, spunk and big-time hooks. Forget summer; try "Brat Calendar Year."Fontaines D.C., ‘Romance’
Ireland's Fontaines D.C. weren't an overnight success. But though they've been rocking out since 2014, "Romance" was a massive, ear-grabbing super-achievement. And rightfully so: There are the electro flirtations ("Starburster"), the subject matter (living in a deceitful world) and the sheer bravado ("In the Modern World"). Really, it was a case of a young band growing up, and their skills elevating and ideas expanding to make a big-time rock album. Timeline aside, "Romance" deserves all the corresponding attention.
St. Vincent, ‘All Born Screaming’
Anne Clark started with weird, confrontational LPs like "Actor." So, after a detour into other ideas/realms (including the '70s-indebted "Daddy's Home"), Clark is back to her OG madness with her seventh LP. But while she may be channeling more Nine Inch Nails over Iggy Pop these days, Clark is unabashedly herself, doling out dispatches about death and life's chaos as only she ever truly could. "All Born Screaming" never flinches or backs down, but through it Clark shines as a singer-songwriter screaming from the edge of art and humanity. You better listen good and hard.
tassel, ‘A SACRIFICE: UNTO IDOLS’
Phoenix band Tassel never try to make their music easy for anyone. The 13 tracks are all wrapped in extra-tight leather and rusty barbed wire, a collection of music as much an exercise in RTI. Yet the LP shines as a punk-industrial mutant, all big, pulverizing emotions and midnight-black vibes that consume your very being. It's not accessible to everyone, but those who get it will find an album that's oddly affirming. Put it on for a while, and you just might enjoy the cuts and bruises.
Vince Staples, ‘Dark Times’
If you want to know Vince Staples, he's given us a trio of albums as "journal." Following 2021's self-titled release and 2022's "Ramona Park Broke My Heart," "Dark Times" is Staples at his most effective. His lyrical approach crafts sharp narratives ("Government Cheese"); he’s raw but always engaging ("Nothing Matters"); and he's got an ear for great production (the Jay Versace/Whosantoine-produced "Étouffée"). It's not an evolution captured on wax, but the final chapter of a story of Staples as a hugely engaging chronicler of modern life. Staples is more vivid than ever, and he is undeniable.