The 100 Best Albums of 2025

The 100 Best Albums of 2025


Contents
Sombr, ‘I Barely Knew Her’Skrillex, ‘F*ck U Skrillex You Think Ur Andy Warhol But Ur Not!!’Demi Lovato, ‘It’s Not That Deep’Lizzo, ‘My Face Hurts From Smiling’Chance the Rapper, ‘Star Line’Lucy Dacus, ‘Forever Is a Feeling’Blondshell, ‘If You Asked for a Picture’Freddie Gibbs, ‘Alfredo 2’Bar Italia, ‘Some Like It Hot’Drake and Partynextdoor, ‘$ome $exy $ongs 4 U’Bob Mould, ‘Here We Go Crazy’Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco, ‘I Said I Love You First’Fola, ‘Catharsis’Amber Mark, ‘Pretty Idea’Chaeyoung, ‘Lil Fantasy Vol. 1’Momma, ‘Welcome to My Blue Sky’Open Mike Eagle, ‘Neighborhood Gods Unlimited’Kaytranada, ‘Ain’t No Damn Way!’Cuco, ‘Ridin”Brian Dunne, ‘Clams Casino’They Are Gutting a Body of Water, ‘LOTTO’Hannah Cohen, ‘Earthstar Mountain’Mobb Deep, ‘Infinite’CMAT, ‘Euro-Country’Deftones, ‘Private Music’Brandi Carlile, ‘Returning to Myself’Hannah Bahng, ‘The Misunderstood EP’Davido, ‘5ive’Milo J, ‘La Vida Es Mas Corta’The Beaches, ‘No Hard Feelings’Kelsey Waldon, ‘Every Ghost’Monaleo, ‘Who Did the Body’Girlpuppy, ‘Sweetness’Mavis Staples, ‘Sad and Beautiful World’Osamason, ‘Jump Out’Wolf Alice, ‘The Clearing’Craig Finn, ‘Always Been’Wet Leg, ‘Moisturizer’Jensen McRae, ‘Don’t Know How But They Found Me’Kwn, ‘With All Due Respect’Cardi B, ‘Am I the Drama?’Bon Iver, ‘Sable, Fable’Tate McRae, ‘So Close to What’Givēon, ‘Beloved’Thom Yorke and Mark Pritchard, ‘Tall Tales’Water From Your Eyes, ‘It’s a Beautiful Place’Mike, ‘Showbiz!’Reneé Rapp, ‘Bite Me’Alex G, ‘Headlights’Central Cee, ‘Can’t Rush Greatness’

Culture-shifting blockbusters, return-to-form statements, brilliant debuts, and more

The music world refused to stand still in 2025. This wasn’t a year for playing it safe. Across the globe and all over the stylistic map, music kept mutating in the weirdest, wildest ways. The artists behind the year’s best albums were taking big swings, not repeating past successes. Lady Gaga brought the mayhem for her most ambitious record in years. Rosalía made her deeply personal statement about sexual and spiritual transcendence. Bad Bunny traveled through time and space, from San Juan to Nuevayol. Pop visionaries like FKA Twigs and Taylor Swift made bold new moves.

Our list has everything from upstart country to Afropop to shoegaze to flamenco. We’ve got brash young indie bands like Geese and Lifeguard; we’ve got fearless rock storytelling from Wednesday and Craig Finn; we’ve got the underground rap poetics of Billy Woods and the radical clubland beats of Pink Pantheress. Some of these artists are rookies, some are legends — the 86-year-old soul queen Mavis Staples rules right next to the teenage kicks of Sombr. There’s comeback kids like Justin Bieber, who rediscovered his swag. Hayley Williams made her solo move, the Clipse proved hardcore never dies, Jeff Tweedy shared his hard-won Zen wisdom, Tyler Childers raised hell. We’ve got pop ingenues from Addison Rae to Olivia Dean. We’ve got melancholy brunettes, sad women, West End girls, man’s best friends.

These albums represent all different styles and beats and genres — but this is the music that kept us moving forward all year long. And it will be reverberating after the year is done.

Photographs in illustration

Noah P Dillon; Eric Rojas; Sam Waxman; Sugar Sylla


www.rollingstone.com
#Albums

Share: X · Facebook · LinkedIn

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *