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The 50 Best Albums of 2020

Photo credit: Esquire - Getty Images
Photo credit: Esquire - Getty Images

From Esquire

A year which was terrible in so many respects proved that music has the power to soothe us when stressed, pick us up off the floor when spirits are low, and bring us together even when we are apart. As film releases stalled, studios still managed to deliver new albums into the world, with many artists sharing the gems which have come from lockdown-inspired creative bursts.

It has been a sublime year for women in rock, with the likes of Phoebe Bridgers and Fiona Apple making brilliant, genre-pushing music. There's also been plenty of disco despite the lack of dance-floor, with amazing releases from Jessie Ware, Róisín Murphy, Dua Lipa and Moodymann. Meanwhile trap, hip-hop and grime music continued to break barriers with artists like Medhane, Bad Bunny and Jay Electronica leading the charge.

But perhaps some of the best music has come from artists who defy being put into a genre, like the spectacularly eerie double albums from both Big Thief singer Adrianna Lenker and Moses Sumney, or the wonderfully slippery music which came from Bartees Strange, Perfume Genius and MIKE.

Whatever your taste, the best 50 albums from this year have something for everyone.

50. Laura Marling – Song for Our Daughter

Photo credit: Ian Gavan - Getty Images
Photo credit: Ian Gavan - Getty Images

Marling's voice is so imbued with a world-weary sorrow that even when singing about socks you feel a wistful longing as though staring out across an expanse of desert. Her spare and delicate seventh album is a worthy follow up to Grammy-nominated 2017 release Semper Femina, stripping back her sound to guitar melodies which let her voice soar.

Skip to: 'Alexandra' – Inspired by a Leonard Cohen track, here Marling's stirring voice sings about a girl who 'Finds diamonds in the drain / One more diamond to add to her chain'.

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49. Thundercat – It Is What It Is

Photo credit: Tim Mosenfelder - Getty Images
Photo credit: Tim Mosenfelder - Getty Images

Stephen Bruner's 2017 album Drunk was the moment the LA musician broke through as Thundercat, the release coming off the back of notable collaborations with Kendrick Lamar and Flying Lotus. His latest release has other big names on offer too, such as a disco groove featuring Steve Lacy, Steve Arrington and Childish Gambino, or the haunting chords of 'King of the Hill', which features Flying Lotus and BADBADNOTGOOD.

Skip to: 'Funny Thing' – Bruner's voice slows down to drift over this breezy moment on the record which is powered by a squelching rhythm.

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48. Childish Gambino – 15.3.20

Photo credit: Rich Fury - Getty Images
Photo credit: Rich Fury - Getty Images

Donald Glover's fourth studio album under his alias Childish Gambino came as a surprise to fans when it appeared, though was fortuitously timed as it's a release which deserves to slowly digested, not least for the intricately coded track titles which are almost all combinations of different digits. '12.38' and '42.26' have a tropical breeze to them, while 'Time' uses boinging sound effects that jitter against Ariana Grande's silky guest vocals.

Skip to: '24.19' – Warped synths and Glover's sensual vocals make for a Prince-esque groove in which he croons: 'Sweet thing / You moved to Southern California, sweet thing /
You do just what your parents told you, sweet thing'.

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47. Ultraísta – Sister

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Photo credit: -

The experimental rock trio made up of producer and Thom Yorke collaborator Nigel Godrich, drummer Joey Waronker, and singer Laura Bettinson earned acclaim with their eponymous debut in 2012. Sister is a sublime follow-up with huge range between the pulsating layers of 'Tin King' and the stripped back emotion of 'Mariella', but with their unique sound threading each of the tracks together.

Skip to: 'Harmony' – Bettinson's voice snakes over a winding melody in this kinetic song which has a Trentemøller feel to it.

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46. The Soft Pink Truth – Shall We Go On Sinning So That Grace May Increase?

Photo credit: Maria Jefferis - Getty Images
Photo credit: Maria Jefferis - Getty Images

Drew Daniel, one half of the experimental duo Matmos, has released a string of albums under The Soft Pink Truth, a side project which started when Matthew Herbert bet Daniel that he couldn't make a house record. His past releases have spanned genres including hardcore metal and punk, and reckoned with the pains and pleasures of gay sexuality. This latest floats between house, jazz and ambient and is perfect lockdown music, an album filled with quiet contemplative moments and bursts of joy.

Skip to: 'We' – Ambient synths sounds stutter and blur as soft sighs usher in a luscious house track with tinges of DJ Koze and Robag Wruhme.

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45. Lil Uzi Vert – Eternal Atake

Photo credit: Erika Goldring - Getty Images
Photo credit: Erika Goldring - Getty Images

Eternal Atake is only the second album from Symere Woods (aka Lil Uzi Vert aka Baby Pluto) and still it confirms him as one of the most exciting talents working in music today, his creativity with drill and hip-hop influences making for a genre-defying sound all fused together by his immaculate rapping.

Skip to: 'You Better Move' – The sound of an old pin ball machine fires in the background of this murky track which shows he is just as in command when slowing things down as at a frantic pace.

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44. LEYA – Flood Dream

Photo credit: Amazon
Photo credit: Amazon

Harpist Marilu Donovan and violinist Adam Markiewicz are the Brooklyn duo who make dreamlike and ethereal music as LEYA. Following their 2018 album The Fool, their second release is haunting, with their delicate instruments used to create moods that are both beautiful and frightening at once. This contradiction is summed up in tracks like 'Mariah', where muffled strings sound like a distant clock chiming.

Skip to: 'Flow' – Donovan's harp strings tremble beautifully in this floating track which, as the longest on the record, drifts on peacefully against warbling vocals and building strings.

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43. Tame Impala – The Slow Rush

Photo credit: Mark Horton - Getty Images
Photo credit: Mark Horton - Getty Images

After a long time away, Kevin Parker, the man who alone creates all of the recorded music for Australian psych-rock band Tame Impala, has returned. The Slow Rush is a map of Parker's myriad musical influences, with everything from hip-hop to house to soul put through a music kaleidoscope and turned into his hallucinogenic sound.

Skip to: 'Borderline' – Thunder rolls through this Seventies rock track which swells with Parker's voice before circling itself robotically at the close

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42. Westerman – Your Hero is Not Dead

Photo credit: Chris Saucedo - Getty Images
Photo credit: Chris Saucedo - Getty Images

Two years after Will Westerman's single 'Confirmation' turned heads, the British singer releases his debut album: a release which shows the depths and variations in his brand of downcast soft rock. In 'Blue Comanche', Westerman's vocals reverberate against slowly echoing percussion, and in 'The Line', it lilts up and down against vibrant guitar chords.

Skip to: 'Easy Money' – Scattered synths give way to a guitar melody as Westerman frustratedly sings: 'Treat me nice / Nobody's looking bad up here / Then I ask you polite / So I don't say no and I don't think twice'.

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41. Romare – Home

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Photo credit: Future Music Magazine - Getty Images

This nine-track release from Romare, aka London DJ Archie Fairhurst, will transport you to the thrumming, dusky light of a festival on Friday night, with the sort of atmospheric and soulful dance music which makes you long for a swaying crowd. Reminiscent of the output of artist like Daphni, or the more melodic cuts from Joy Orbison, highlights on Home include the zippy, bass-heavy 'Heaven', and 'Gone', a sprawling, eight-minute number built round an ethereal voice that moans over soaring waves, eventually crashing against a circling drum loop.

Skip to: 'The River' – Snatches of vocal samples ping-pong against a marching beat in this spiritual track, which features a Messianic voice singing about a promised river while percussive sounds rattle overhead.

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40. Sufjan Stevens – The Ascension

Photo credit: Kevin Winter
Photo credit: Kevin Winter

The Detroit singer-songwriter's eighth solo album grapples with the rotting of American culture and the changing landscape of the country as the internet and technology change it for the worse. The result is a spaced-out collection of tracks which feels both existential and deeply human in the emotions they conjure, from the machine sounds of 'Video Game' to the foreboding arcade noises of 'Death Star'.

Skip to: 'Run Away With Me' – A lilting, fairytale like moment comes in the form of this delicate moment in which Stevens's voice is ghost-like as he sings, 'And I say, "Love, come run away with me'.

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39. Dominic Fike – What Could Possibly Go Wrong?

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Photo credit: Graham Denholm - Getty Images

Though the Naples (Florida, that is) native sports the same the same bleached hair, smattering of tattoos and curious eyes as Pete Davidson et al, Dominic Fike's voice has an unbridled energy that sets him apart. The rapper's debut album is an ode to the ephemera of early twenties, with getting cancelled, texting while driving and chicken tenders all getting shoutouts in the wry and contagious record.

Skip to: 'Why' – A perfect lazy jam for the distant memory of a never-ending summer, here Fike comes close to a romantic ballad, singing, 'Why would you pay for this apartment / You don't belong in? / You take this shit from all your bosses / And all your boyfriends'.

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38. Nadine Shah – Kitchen Sink

Photo credit: Lorne Thomson - Getty Images
Photo credit: Lorne Thomson - Getty Images

The English singer-songwriter's fourth album sees Shah truly hit her stride, interrogating domestic life which, as the title suggests, has an alluring but uncomfortable sense of realism. In 'Buckfast' she creates a rousing rock anthem about gaslighting and toxic relationships, while in 'Ladies for Babies (Goats for Love)' she sings in a hypnotising but sinister tone about the treatment of women in a fable about a farmer who neglects his wife.

Skip to: 'Kite' – Shah's sound becomes more sparse and delicate in this sombre track with gothic chanting, strings plucked repeatedly like a bell chiming and tinkling sounds fluttering in the ether.

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37. Kehlani – It Was Good Until It Wasn’t

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Photo credit: Andrew Chin - Getty Images

The second album from Californian singer Kehlani Ashley Parrish features a girl wearing denim shorts peeping over a concrete wall to an idyllic sky of palm trees; an illustration of the grit and glamour, darkness and light that weave against each other on the album. It Was Good Until It Wasn’t is Kehlani's best release yet, one filled with smooth R&B, nimble rapping and Parrish's silken voice.

Skip to: 'Grieving' – With guest vocals from James Blake, this slowly winding track is a melancholic ode to an unnamed ex which shudders tenderly.

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36. Future Islands – As Long As You Are

Photo credit: Mark Horton - Getty Images
Photo credit: Mark Horton - Getty Images

The third album from the Baltimore band is a return to form after their sophomore release which frontman Samuel T. Herring says was made too quickly in order to keep the momentum around the band going. On As Long As You Are the band push beyond their signature synth-pop sound to create songs which are more challenging both musically and thematically.

Skip to: 'Moonlight' – Herring's voice, so often commanding and wild, here catches you off-guard with its plainness, his call of, 'Here's my heart, don't break it / It's all that I ask / Nothing more' drifts in and out against the dreamy soundscape of a soft bass melody.

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35. Kelly Lee Owens – Inner Song

Photo credit: Scott Dudelson
Photo credit: Scott Dudelson

Welsh electronic musician Kelly Lee Owens's sophomore album is brilliantly twisted, morphing from steely techno to trance-inducing pop which sweeps you up like a wave. In one track, 'Jeanette', a song about losing a loved one, synth sounds twitch frantically like a switchboard lighting up before a melody breaks through and blooms.

Skip to: 'On' – Written on the day The Prodigy's Keith Flint died, Owens has said she channeled the spirit of the frontman in writing the lyrics to this enigmatic yet powerful track about the end of a relationship.

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34. Róisín Murphy – Róisín Machine

Photo credit: Burak Cingi
Photo credit: Burak Cingi

Róisín Murphy's fifth solo album sees the pioneering artist break new ground again, as on Róisín Machine the Irish songstress has created a record which will make you pine for the dance-floor. The album often uses carefree-sounding music as a smokescreen for pains and regrets, like the rousing disco track 'Murphy's Law', where she traces the scab of a heartbreak that she can't help but pick, or the catchy funk of 'Incapable', where she asks, numbly, 'Never had a broken heart / Am I incapable of love?'.

Skip to: 'Something More' – The longing refrain of 'I want something more' repeated against a slow disco beat makes for an achingly tender and stirring moment which shows Murphy at her most soulful and exposed.

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33. Daniel Avery – Love + Light

Photo credit: David Wolff - Patrick - Getty Images
Photo credit: David Wolff - Patrick - Getty Images

The English producer and DJ's third release is fused with dark energy: rapid-fire shots in 'Searing Light, Forward Motion', a reverberating, hollow white noise in 'Depth Wish' and an off-kilter jangling alarm on 'Dusting For Smoke'. But there are dreamier, more surreal moments, too, like the twinkling harp notes in 'Katana' and the meandering introspection on 'Fuzzwar'.

Skip to: 'Dream Distortion' – Synths echo against each other and what sounds like air being pumped into a chaotic room battle it out in this six-minute track, which will make you long for the frenetic haze of a club.

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32. MIKE – Weight of the World

Photo credit: David A. Smith - Getty Images
Photo credit: David A. Smith - Getty Images

MIKE's 2019 album Tears of Joy affirmed the Earl Sweatshirt protégé as an exciting new talent in rap, channeling the pain of his mother's death into a deeply moving portrait of grief and loss. Now his follow-up, Weight of the World, reckons with the next stage of that grieving process, imbuing the 16-track release with the spectrum of painful emotions that run through his daydreams and nightmares.

Skip to: '222' – Spacey piano notes flutter against synths and MIKE's voice echoes in and out as he mutters: 'Believe I got the nerve, seein' mommy with the burden / Had to hit the curb, papa told me hit the churches / Thinkin' got me hurt, got me emptyin' the bourbon'.

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31. Four Tet – Sixteen Oceans

Photo credit: Jordi Vidal - Getty Images
Photo credit: Jordi Vidal - Getty Images

There is a specific Four Tet mood which Kieran Hebden conjures with his music: a gentle wistfulness which feels like it fills your whole body. On his latest he again combines romantic instruments, like harps or flutes, with digitally synthesised sounds, fusing them together to make something which feels both excitingly new and soothingly familiar.

Skip to: 'Teenage Birdsong' – A flute melody plays on a twisting loop which hums like birds wings fluttering over a faintly rumbling bassline.

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30. 070 Shake – Modus Vivendi

Photo credit: Joseph Okpako - Getty Images
Photo credit: Joseph Okpako - Getty Images

Hip-hop artist Danielle Balbuena, who takes her moniker from the area code for her native state of New Jersey, was signed to Kanye West's label after racking up hundreds of thousands of streams on her Soundcloud page. The 22-year-old's vocals even appear on 'ghost town' – the one redeeming track on West's 2018 album, ye. Her debut album, Modus Vivendi, sees her both rapping and singing, her voice given a warped sound through autotune as she sings about whether to trust a partner or feelings of loneliness.

Skip to: 'Don't Break The Silence' – This eerie, winding intro to the album comes in at under two minutes but is the perfect introduction to Balbuena's stirring sound.

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29. Denai Moore – Modern Dread

Photo credit: Adam Berry - Getty Images
Photo credit: Adam Berry - Getty Images

British-Jamaican artist Denai Moore's third album is a transfixing blend of electro-pop and R&B with her soaring voice at the centre of it. In pop anthem 'Too Close' her vocals ride a snaking bassline, while on 'Cascades' the beat slows and grooves with autotune as she asks sweetly, 'Laying flat, would you hold me hand and stay awake?'

Skip to: 'Motherless Child' – Sharp synths that bob against a glowing bass are the backdrop to this track about disconnection and identity, as the chorus repeats: 'Got this feeling, I'm a motherless child / Broken ceilings, send me straight to the sky.'

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28. Moodymann – Taken Away

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Photo credit: -

Kenny Dixon Jr, known more commonly as Detroit DJ Moodymann, alludes to his experience of being held at gunpoint by police officers in 2019 on his new release, Taken Away, with police sirens rolling through the title track. Elsewhere the release, which is only available to buy on Bandcamp, samples Al Green's 'Love and Happiness' in the soulful opening and closing tracks of the record.

Skip to: 'Let Me Show You Love' – A warped disco groove slides through this sensual dance-floor moment which is interspersed with moans and whispers.

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27. Grimes – Miss Anthropocene

Photo credit: Matt Cowan
Photo credit: Matt Cowan

“Ethereal nu metal,” is how Claire Elise Boucher, the zany Canadian pop-star known as Grimes, describes her fifth studio album. While it has a certain dreamy quality to it, it feels concerned with very human worries, from the inward reflection about her relationships to concerns about climate change. Grimes' voice flickers between soaring and gravelly throughout, whether it's over intense trance or synthetic drum beats.

Skip to: 'You'll miss me when I'm not around' – A frenetic bass charges under poppy vocals, Grimes's soft voice contrasted with masochistic lyrics which trill, 'If they could see me now, smiling six feet underground / I'll tie my feet to rocks and drown'.

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26. Lianne La Havas – Lianne La Havas

Photo credit: Gus Stewart - Getty Images
Photo credit: Gus Stewart - Getty Images

Lianne La Havas' self-titled third album is hypnotic and beguiling, languishing thoughtfully in the aftermath of a break-up in a series of bare and beautiful guitar tracks. In the syrupy 'Please Don't Make Me Cry' she laments, "I show you my pretty scars, they make us whatever we are" over Nick Hakim's electric guitar. On the rather jauntier 'Read My Mind', guitar strings twinkle against an imaginary breeze.

Skip to: 'Paper Thin' – One of the album's most downcast moments is also its most memorable, a winding melody enveloping heartbreaking lyrics as La Havas croons: "But you're not the only one who's suffering / That's enough, I know you're made of better stuff, baby / You gotta roam free, please / Don't forget about me".

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25. Jyoti – Mama, You Can Bet!

Photo credit: Tim Mosenfelder
Photo credit: Tim Mosenfelder

Los Angeles jazz musician Georgia Anne Muldrow’s third solo release under moniker Jyoti sees her continue to fuse rap and neo-soul into her sound to make some of the most exciting and experimental jazz around. Muldrow has described Mama, You Can Bet! as a vocal document of her inner feelings, and as such the record feels like it gives us some access to her inner tumult, with tracks which are often fleeting but always memorable.

Skip to: 'Mama, You Can Bet' – The album's title track is a tribute to Muldrow's mother and a touching portrait of Black motherhood as she croons, 'Mama, don't you fret / Mama I know love's waiting around the corner for you'.

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24. U.S. Girls – Heavy Light

Photo credit: Adela Loconte
Photo credit: Adela Loconte

American musician and producer Meghan Remy started making music as solo experimental pop project U.S. Girls in 2007. Thirteen years later and her seventh studio album, Heavy Light, marks her most impressive yet, with rock, pop and disco influences fused together and Remy's warm vocals masking themes of trauma and pain. There are stirring piano ballads like 'Woodstock 99'; eccentric anthems like the Julia Holter-esque 'Born to Lose', and snippets of conversation in 'Advice to Teenage Self', where we hear a female voice say, “I would tell her that I loved her, and that life is long.”

Skip to: '4 American Dollars' – Borrowing a Martin Luther King Jr. quote, this disco jam has an old soul feel to it, as Remy's voice chants, 'You can do a lot with four American dollars / You can do a lot with four American dollars'.

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23. Dua Lipa – Future Nostalgia

Photo credit: Gary Miller - Getty Images
Photo credit: Gary Miller - Getty Images

The English singer-songwriter's sophomore album confirms her as one of the most exciting pop musicians working at the moment. Future Nostalgia, which Lipa pulled forward to give fans something to enjoy in self-isolation, features retro funk beats as in 'Don't Start Now', and jazzy, Kylie-esque anthems like 'Break My Heart', with Lipa softly singing, 'I should have stayed at home / cause I was doing better alone'.

Skip to: 'Levitating' – There are more than a few shades of Katy Perry on this bouncy, rousing song which blends sugar-sweet pop and tongue-twisting lyrics.

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22. Nubya Garcia – Source

Photo credit: Peter Van Breukelen - Getty Images
Photo credit: Peter Van Breukelen - Getty Images

The debut album from British jazz composer and saxophonist Nubya Garcia is a thrilling record which puts her in the company of the names at the forefront of modern jazz, from Kamasi Washington to Sons of Kemet, whose last album she appeared on. On Source, her singular talent is laid bare, from the velvet smoothness of 'Pace' to the dizzying riffs of 'Inner Game'.

Skip to: 'La cumbia me está llamando' – A rising tide builds in this rhythmic four minute track in which the voices of the Colombian all-female enter the fray.

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21. Fiona Apple – Fetch the Bolt Cutters

Photo credit: Jack Vartoogian/Getty Images - Getty Images
Photo credit: Jack Vartoogian/Getty Images - Getty Images

Fiona Apple's electric fifth album burns with a kind of rage that sits inside you and hollows you out as she sings about terrible dates, memories of bullying, sexual assault and the quotidian pains of just existing day after day. Though there's darkness lurking throughout, Apple buries it so that you almost miss it through the wry lyrics and often jaunty melodies.

Skip to: 'Ladies' – A closing time piano ballad shows Apple's lyrical comedy as she sings out to her ex's new partner, offering up the dress she left behind with the lines, 'I didn't fit in it / it was never mine / It belonged to the ex wife of another ex of mine.'

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20. Yves Tumor – Heaven to a Tortured Mind

Photo credit: Burak Cingi - Getty Images
Photo credit: Burak Cingi - Getty Images

There's a swagger from the opening track of Heaven to a Tortured Mind, the latest release from Yves Tumor, the alias of Tennessee-raised artist Sean Bowie. As with the names of each track ('Kerosene!, 'Dream Palette', 'Asteroid Blues') Tumor rapidly cycles through different moods and genres, surprising and delighting in the process.

Skip to: 'Identity Trade' – As the chameleonic title suggests, this shifting track features madcap wind instruments alongside a chorus which repeats, 'Pure water from the fire, reflect my spirit'.

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19. Amaarae – The Angel You Don’t Know

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Photo credit: -

The dazzling debut album from Ghanian-American singer Ama Serwah Genfi is a treasure trove of influences including Nineties R&B, dance-pop and even Nigerian alté music – a scene of alternative music blossoming in the African country. On 'Fancy', Genfi celebrates being a 'bad bitch' in a crooning baby voice, while elsewhere, the more downcast 'Party Sad Face' closes the album on a rueful note that feels like the bright light of the morning after.

Skip to: 'Jumping Ship' – Genfi enlists the help of Kojey Radical and Cruel Santino in this afro-beat inspired track which brings together breathless vocals and zigzagging melodies.

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18. Taylor Swift - folklore

Photo credit: Kevin Winter - Getty Images
Photo credit: Kevin Winter - Getty Images

Swift's surprise eighth album is one in which she stops being the dramatic figure at the centre of attention, instead retreating from focus in an indie record which sees her collaborate with Bon Iver and call upon the production skills of The National's Aaron Dessner. This ploy might be another way for Swift to frame her storytelling, with folklore decorated with myths and fairytales, but it's one in which her talent burns bright.

Skip to: 'the last great american dynasty' – This Fitzgerald-esque fable about Standard Oil heiress Rebekah Harkness – whose Rhode Island house Swift now owns – glitters with images of loud parties and swimming pools filled with Champagne. A track which combines the indie influences on the record and Swift's pop prowess seamlessly.

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17. Jay Electronica – A Written Testimony

Photo credit: Kevin Mazur - Getty Images
Photo credit: Kevin Mazur - Getty Images

New Orleans rapper and producer Jay Electronica has been keeping fans on their toes since he gained a cult following on MySpace in 2008, going on to become cosy with Jay Z, date Erykah Badu and ghostwrite for NAS. Twelve years later and A Written Testimony is, astonishingly, his debut release, but one worth the wait thanks to collaborations with Travis Scott, uncredited vocals from Jay Z, and production from Khruangbin.

Skip to: 'Ghost of Soulja Slim' Sampling John Williams's 'Jennifer's French Movie' gives a sweeping cinematic feel to this track, a vibe which contrasts with Jay Z and Jay Electronica's rap battles which touch on the Rothschilds and Tidal.

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16. Lomelda – Hannah

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Photo credit: -

The self-titled fourth studio album from Texas singer-songwriter Hannah Read is filled with beautiful and spare indie rock. Lomelda – a made-up word that Read says means "echo of the stars" – makes music which has the sense of being lost, but kind of enjoying that feeling. Here, that is calling from route 110 as a security guard asks if she is OK in 'Stranger Sat By Me', or reckoning with who she is in 'Reach', muttering, 'So confused who I have been who I haven't / How'd you know, know?'

Skip to: 'Hannah Sun' – 'I sent you the sun from my hometown' is the opening refrain on this soft and lilting track, which blooms beautifully as Read's voice falters with emotion.

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15. KeiyaA – Forever, Ya Girl

Photo credit: KeiyaA
Photo credit: KeiyaA

Chicago-raised singer KeiyaA's debut album comes released on her own eponymous label, lending the 16 track release the feel of a homemade mixtape that combines downcast grime and smooth R&B. 'Way Eye' is silky smooth melody interspersed with strange samples of voices, it leads into 'Rectifiya', where janky chords loop against sighing vocals.

Skip to: 'Hvnli' – Here KeiyaA blends spoken word and glitching synths while she sings 'Gone for so long, I prefer to spend time alone with my pain / Gone for so long, I can barely recall, the last my phone rang'.

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14. Beatrice Dillon – Workaround

Photo credit: John Phillips - Getty Images
Photo credit: John Phillips - Getty Images

The first album from London electronic artist Beatrice Dillon is a thrilling debut, comprised of 14 tracks which feel like a winding set of musical daydreams. There are more sparse sketches, as with the quiet bubbling 'Workaround Five', and intense moments like the glitching synth sounds of 'Cloud Strum', and all enjoyable moods to drift into

Skip to: 'Workaround Two' – A hammering drum pattern morphs into a disguised saxophone melody in this brilliantly strange trip reminiscent of a Floating Points track.

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13. Bad Bunny – YHLQMDLG

Photo credit: Kevin Winter
Photo credit: Kevin Winter

Latin trap star Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio's third album, YHLQMDLG, has become the highest-charting Spanish album in American history since its release. Though the Puerto Rican artist is known for his rapping, his third release looks further afield, incorporating disco, reggaetón and R&B to give it a multifaceted and modern flavour.

Skip to: 'Está Cabrón Ser Yo' – A murkier moment on the record comes in this trap-heavy collaboration with rapper Anuel AA who makes for an excellent sparring partner.

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12. Soccer Mommy – color theory

Photo credit: Morgan Lieberman
Photo credit: Morgan Lieberman

Sophie Allison's murky indie rock dives deeper on her second record, color theory, which picks away at the things that pain us, holding her feelings up to the light for a closer look. On the languid 'night swimming' she 'dances with the current in her clothes', guitar chords pooling like riptides around her voice, and on 'royal screw up', self-resentment seeps out as she sings 'I'm the princess of screwin' up'.

Skip to: 'circle the drain' – One of the best songs of the last year, Allison's wearily sings, 'Round and around / Circle the drain / I'm going down', in this indie classic which features early Aughts drums and guitar chords.

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11. Adrianne Lenker – songs / instrumentals

Photo credit: Burak Cingi - Getty Images
Photo credit: Burak Cingi - Getty Images

This beautiful double album from Big Thief singer Adrianna Lenker is the perfect music for a rainy day inside, made when the songwriter holed up in a cabin in Massachusetts while reckoning with a break-up and the newly-blooming Coronavirus pandemic. The 11-track songs and two-track instrumentals were recorded on an 8-track tape machine and have a sense of hushed contemplation to them which is both eerie and beautiful.

Skip to: 'anything' – The fragments of a broken relationship are writ heartbreakingly large as Lenker sings, 'I wanna sleep in your car while you’rе driving / Lay in your lap when I’m crying'.

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10. Bartees Strange – Live Forever

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Photo credit: -

The debut album from D.C. musician Bartees Cox, Jr. is chameleonic, shuffling through rap, indie rock and folk music to give a record that feels exhilaratingly free. It is one which begs to be listened to over and over again to discover the hidden threads between the tracks. Rock anthem 'Mustang' is flooded with memorable images, like 'Two trains hella long, too high to sleep, my crooked bones', while on 'Boomer', rapid vocals cascade against indie-punk guitar riffs.

Skip to: 'Flagey God' – A shuddering bass-line ripples as Cox softly sings, ' If I was wrong, let me be / I feel like a ghost right now, finally', in the opening of this heady, spiritual-feeling track.

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9. HAIM – Women in Music Pt. III

Photo credit: Peter Wafzig - Getty Images
Photo credit: Peter Wafzig - Getty Images

The newest release from Haim sisters Este, Danielle and Alana might not have graced the carefree July we expected, but it still brought a moment of summer romance to a gloomy world. The trio's third album, Women in Music Pt. III, moves through the moods of the summertime, from the breezy saxophone melody on 'Los Angeles', which feels like walking pavements in the sunshine, to the uplifting anthem 'The Steps', and later the woozy sadness on disorientated '3am'.

Skip to: 'I Know Alone' – A garage-inflected track about the flatness of time when depressed takes on a new meaning in a world in lockdown, lamenting: 'Been a couple days since I've been out / Calling all my friends but they won't pick up / Found another room in a different place / Sleeping through the day and I dream the same'.

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8. Jessie Ware – What's Your Pleasure?

Photo credit: NurPhoto - Getty Images
Photo credit: NurPhoto - Getty Images

Ware's mystical disco record gave everyone the scintillating feeling of a heady dance-floor this year, even if they were only able to dance to it in their living room. On What's Your Pleasure she fuses funk, disco and house, catapulting these genres in different directions, like the 4am slow, soul-searching of 'In Your Eyes', or the contagious beats which ripple through the title track.

Skip to: 'Spotlight' – A track which feels like it takes you on the full journey of a night out, from the shimmering fairytale opening seconds, to the strobe-lit beats of a dance-floor which lead into a moaning, euphoric crescendo.

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7. Caribou – Suddenly

Photo credit: Burak Cingi - Getty Images
Photo credit: Burak Cingi - Getty Images

Dan Snaith, who also DJs under the moniker Daphni, returned five years after the release of his excellent album 'Our Love' which featured the sound of the summer track 'Can't Do Without You'. His fifth album, Suddenly, is a mash-up of influences, from new-age jazz to modern hip-hop, and covers topics as diverse as grief and the #MeToo movement, all wrapped up in his signature euphoric and nostalgic sound.

Skip to: 'Sunny's Time' – Another new direction for the genre-shifting artist comes in the form of this track which begins with a serene piano ballad before warping into a woozy trap beat with rap threaded through it.

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6. Run the Jewels – RTJ4

Photo credit: Kevin Winter - Getty Images
Photo credit: Kevin Winter - Getty Images

The fourth album from Killer Mike and El-P's was released early, with Run the Jewels saying “We hope it brings you some joy. Fuck it, why wait". The record could hardly feel more of the moment, with tracks waging war on the police system's systemic racism, as well as tthe everyday experience of being a Black man in a country where slave masters pose on dollar bills.

Skip to: 'Walking in the snow' – Killer Mike's evisceration of his own liberal, Twitter-performing fans invokes the words of Eric Garner and George Floyd: "You so numb you watch the cops choke out a man like me / Until my voice goes from a shriek to whisper—‘I can’t breathe’."

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5. Moses Sumney – græ

Photo credit: Moses Robinson - Getty Images
Photo credit: Moses Robinson - Getty Images

The second half of Sumney's album – the first 12 tracks were released digitally last December – was born into a very different world, and one that feels even more primed for his quiet yet deeply affecting music. græ is arresting, featuring guest appearances from the likes of James Blake in a release where Sumney's raw vocals trill against muffled guitar strings or loose jazz piano.

Skip to: 'Bless Me' – 'Bless me / Before you go / You're goin' nowhere with me' Sumney sings carefully and slowly in the chorus of this swelling track which, at the close of the record, makes for a gloriously euphoric ending.

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4. Medhane – Cold Water

Photo credit: @mehdonny
Photo credit: @mehdonny

New York rapper Medhane's voice has such a deep, honeyed sound that even while rapping it sounds like he's pausing to consider his words carefully. Cold Water marked the Brooklynite's third release in three months but this full-length album is his most impressive yet, one packed with so much jazz, soul and rhythm that the sound stays with you in your bones.

Skip to: 'Off Tha Strength' – A collaboration with KeiyaA that sees her voice shimmering above Medhane's as he raps poetically: "Awake for days / Moving thru the maze / Stargaze / Scarred frame / Working till we saw change / Short days / I could feel the floor shake."

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3. Perfume Genius – Set My Heart on Fire Immediately

Photo credit: Burak Cingi - Getty Images
Photo credit: Burak Cingi - Getty Images

The fifth album from Michael Alden Hadreas's alias Perfume Genius is like a musical

rorschach test for the days of reflection, emptiness and occasional bliss that so much of the world is experiencing. "What I’m reaching for is patience, safety," said Hadreas of the record when speaking to the New Yorker, and though there is darkness in the emotional subject matter his touches upon, there is also restraint and calmness in his shimmering and transcendent music.

Skip to: 'On the Floor' – The album's most bouncy pop moment is a playful mask over lyrics which intone: 'The constant buzzing all through the night / The fighting rips me all up inside'.

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2. Waxahatchee – Saint Cloud

Photo credit: Jason Kempin - Getty Images
Photo credit: Jason Kempin - Getty Images

Listening to Saint Cloud, the fifth studio album from Katie Crutchfield's solo project, Waxahatchee, transports you to America's South, the soft folk conjuring dusty sunsets and glowing fields. It distilled the quietness and reflection of the year in an effortless way, while also speaking to so many universal truths about love and pain. Crutchfield has spoken of how the album is largely inspired by her decision to get sober, and that yearning is visible in the rallying call of 'Lilacs', where she sings, 'If I'm a broken record / Write it in the dust, babe / I'll fill myself back up like I used to do / And if my bones are made of delicate sugar / I won't end up anywhere good without you'.

Skip to: 'Fire' –There's something mournful but transfixing about Crutchfield's voice here, which sounds like she's standing on the edge of her life and taking stock, pleading as she sings, 'I'm wiser and slow and attuned / And I am down on my knees'.

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1. Phoebe Bridgers – Punisher

Photo credit: Tim Mosenfelder - Getty Images
Photo credit: Tim Mosenfelder - Getty Images

In a year in which so much music seems to speak to our collective experience, none grappled with the nihilism and existentialism in such a succinct and original way quite so well as Phoebe Bridgers on Punisher. As with Bridgers' 2017 album Stranger in the Alps, her sophomore solo album is filled with music that aches with longing and loneliness in a way that still feels righteous and alive. From resentment tracks to haunted house fairytales, Bridgers' music is life against a background of doom, loneliness and the end of the world, all delivered via her trademark sardonic wit. Punisher is a middle-finger, snarling, grinning, scream in response to the end of the world that makes you want to roar.

Skip to: 'I Know The End' – the closing song for the album is a rousing metal track which, like the kind of natural disaster Bridgers' was inspired by, sweeps through you like a tornado.

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