Feature / Music / Year End 2024
Scene Point Blank's Favorites: Year End (2024)

January 4, 2025

Scene Point Blank's Favorites: Year End (2024)
Scene Point Blank's Favorites: Year End (2024)

It's 2025, somehow. When did this happen?! Okay, okay, four days ago. But honestly. It feels like 2012 was only a few months ago. Is it just SPB who's feeling a little, well, timestruck?

But don't worry – we've got you. Did 2024 pass you by, too? Still not caught up on all the albums you suspect were released in the last twelve months? Fear not.

We've completed our annual summary of the best records released in 2024, and we're very excited to share them with you.

In time-honoured SPB fashion, we've asked our contributing staff to write up a list of their favorite albums, and summed them together into a sitewide megalist, with no further editorialising or propaganda. Read on to discover what SPB staff thought of the best music of 2024.

Overall list

1

The Cure

Songs of a Lost World

Capitol, Fiction, Lost Music, Polydor/Universal

How do you continue to innovate artistically when you've been doing things this long? What mountains are left to conquer when your "classic era" spans decades and your audience continues to expand as newer artists continue to reference you? Thankfully, Robert Smith and pals still have the answer, on this their first record in sixteen years. The intervening years have seen personal losses for Smith, huge changes in the world and society, and the slow pace of Songs of a Lost World matches the slow, methodical release schedule of the Cure's latter-day output. But this is a shining, melancholic return to form. Dark, powerful, beautiful and unlike anything else, this is the Cure at their inimitable best, playing the sound of aging and loss.

Matt

2

Uranium Club

Infants Under The Bulb

Anti Fade Records, Static Shock Records

Do you take your punk with saxophone? Do you like post-angular guitars and rhythmic, near-spoken vocals? If so, Uranium Club is probably right for you. Apparently they call this egg punk nowadays. I would have called it art-punk. It definitely runs in the left-of-the-dial, DIY punk world, but has that glasses-wearing, proud-of-your-weirdness element that makes it hard to pin down to a single descriptor. It sounds like Wire and The Fall and maybe a touch of Lifter Puller and Shellac…kind of. In many ways it reminds me of No Wave era, but with modern production and some surprises along the way, all connected by hypnotic, head-nodding rhythms. It has the dynamic creativity of ‘80s Touch & Go and the personality of early punk. While it wanders fertile creative ground, there’s just enough traditional song structure to keep cohesive and digestible. I missed the hype when the band released The Cosmo Cleaners: The Higher Calling Of Business Provocateurs in 2018. But it’s 2024 and I’m playing Infants Under The Bulb a lot, and digging deeper into Uranium Club’s catalog too.

Loren

3

Bright Eyes

Five Dice, All Threes

Dead Oceans

After re-recording their classic earlier records, Taylor Swift-like, Bright Eyes have returned to grace us with this middle-aged (but happier for it) follow-up to their 2020 return to form Down in the Weeds Where the World Once Was. Mixing genres and found sounds as usual, there's a lived-in quality to Conor Oberst's lyricisms and witticisms, but if you've been along for the ride to this point, you're already a convert. This is the sound of a band having fun, firing on all cylinders, and bringing their pals along for a ride. 

Matt

4

Sweat

Love Child

Vitriol

Sweat hit the ground running with their debut, working up a lather on Gotta Give It Up. Two years later, the California trio is back and they still seem plenty angry. Their second LP, Love Child may have a charming title but it has just as much fire as their debut. It follows a similar style while showing more nuance and growth. The biggest development I see on this record is that the guitar carries more of the melody, where Tuna Tardugno’s vocals were the core emotive piece on the last one. The tapestry weaves together just a little bit more this time, with interplay between the two bringing some forceful moments. The first time around, the vocals somewhat stole the show. They are just as effective now, but with even stronger backing. As a whole, this record hits me similarly to the first one. I’d argue that Side B is a little bit stronger, but not in a night vs. day comparison or anything. It’s just a strong record that ends on a high note. 

Loren

5

Ekko Astral

pink balloons

Topshelf

This music is for people “who are struggling, who are at their absolute lowest" according to vocalist and guitar player Jael Holzman. Am I at my absolute lowest? No. Have I had a bit of a rough patch? Sure (it’s not that bad – don’t worry about it mom). Can I relate to music for people “who are struggling, who are at their absolute lowest"? Yes, obviously, we all can. That’s what makes Ekko Astral’s album pink balloons so soulfully relatable. pink balloons is not just music for when you’re feeling low, but the anecdote to it. It doesn’t just commiserate. It’s joyful, loud and pridefully political. It confronts sadness with a deep understanding and a wall of wailing guitars. A lot of noise albums fall into the same trap- monotony. It’s a wall of fuzz and squealing guitars the whole way through. Ekko Astral jumps over the pitfall with ease. The changing tempos, jittery melodies and hypnotic, rhythmic vocals keep every track feeling fresh. Ekko Astral’s brash, energetic LP is a punk rock lesson in joy and belonging.

Delaney

6

Night Court

$hit Machine

Recess

Forget all the stereotypes about punk. Night Court are a punk band, but they aren’t nihilistic or aggressive. Instead, they’re scrappy and DIY and -- while they are certainly cynical at times -- they carry an air of positivity. It’s a well-defined sound on the band’s fourth LP, with 17 bouncy songs to singalong to. At heart these are pop songs, inspired by ‘90s alt rock, punk, lo-fi, and a splash of B-52’s. While the band has a clear formula, the songs never blur together. This doesn’t sound like the same song 17 times. It sounds like a cohesive collection of likeminded tunes. I’ve enjoyed the entire Night Court discography, but it feels a more cohesive this time around, with all of those little pieces fitting together just a little more tightly without losing its chaotic undertone, like it could fall apart at any time, in the best possible way.

Loren

7

Sex Organs

We're Fucked

Voodoo Rhythm

Sex Organs is a duo based between The Netherlands and Switzerland, formed by members of The Anomalys and The Jackets who play scuzzy garage-punk while dressed as genitalia. Obviously, it’s a gimmick where the band has a focus on their fun, sex positive message rather than breaking new artistic ground. That’s a short way of saying this record reminds me of a lot of classic garage rock tunes over 12 tracks. It’s the rare case where you can somewhat judge an album by its cover, at least as far as knowing what you’re about to spin on your record player. Song topics include dildos, assholes, underpants and general naughtiness. Take that R-rated theme and add a singalong party punk vibe and you have the band’s basic sound figured out. 

Loren

8

The Sleeveens

The Sleeveens

Dirtnap

You know how most records start out with an absolute banger? It sets a mood, for sure, but it often feels like the band doesn’t top it as the full album plays out. I’m definitely not saying that The Sleeveens deliver a dud with the first song here, “Give My Regards To The Dancing Girls,” but I am saying that it keeps picking up steam from the beginning. With this style of rock, the hooks need to do the talking. Think early protopunk meets the Ramones, like Stooges energy with a Ramones rhythm. It’s high strung, masculine and feels mostly timeless. In fact, the most impressive thing to me about this debut record is how the band manages this sound, which often sounds overproduced and too pristine in the modern era. This record has the feel of being in the crowd in a dingy bar as the band up front reinvents rock ‘n’ roll before your very eyes. It’s good on the very first listen, and even better on repeat.

Loren

9

Grumpster

Grumpster

Pure Noise

Grumpster is just one of those bands. The first record caught my attention, the second was a “whoa” moment, and now it’s already album number three, five years later. It’s been a relatively quick progression and there’s a big jump in sound between the first and last albums, but it’s also linear and it makes sense. The band come from the California Bay Area and play poppy punk with a realist point-of-view. Fever Dream felt upbeat, even while dealing with more depressing subject matter (“Today I almost crashed my car for fun”). On this new self-titled record the band has embraced where they crashed landed. They are back on their feet -- perhaps battered and bruised -- but the grit pairs beautifully with the upbeat tones. They are determined to get back on the road, back in control. A self-titled Record #3 is a statement. It’s not exactly starting over, but it’s looking forward instead of back. The journey will continue.

Loren

10

Ultrabomb

Dying To Smile

DC-Jam Records

Some may think this is a punk supergroup that will slip into the moonlit graffiti-strewn alleyway, never to be spotted again. However, this is where I must correct you on your erroneous ways of doubt: Ultrabomb explodes all over your turntable with this pristine bone white vinyl. How can you go wrong with Finny McConnell (The Mahones), Greg Norton (Husker Du) and Jamie Oliver (U.K Subs)? Ultrabomb have gelled with this release proving they are no one-trick magical unicorn but a lasting project that exudes camaraderie, strength and experience. Get it before it detonates.

Christopher D

11

Spectral Voice

Sparagmos

Dark Descent

Good things take time. The seven-year wait from Erroding Corridors of Unbeing to Sparagmos was necessary for Spectral Voice. Their death/doom brewed patiently, increasing its hallucinogenic essence and fundamental extreme characteristics. While not necessarily a novel combination, it has been a minute since an act of that style tapped so deeply and completely into this crossroads of paradigms. The result is a psychotropic experience of the most potent kind, a bad trip with no ending in sight. To that end, Spectral Voice embrace many diverse elements, from post-metallic leanings to dark ambient passages, resulting in a work that is labyrinthine and multifaceted. Sparagmos, as its name suggests, is a work that tears you apart. A record that traverses the path of despair and madness. It is a combination defined by the original pioneers of death/doom, and now Spectral Voice have produced a record of the same caliber.

Spyros Stasis

12

Laura Jane Grace

Hole In My Head

Polyvinyl

On her second solo album Laura Jane Grace throws back, looks ahead and reminds us why we should be grateful for the present. A foil to pandemic times Stay Alive, it reaches out with retro tinged punk tunes that catapult her from sounding like Bob Dylan to Joan Jett to Phoebe Bridgers and back again. While most of the tracks are spare musically and quite short they still feel fleshed out and full; in large part due to Grace’s warm vocals and nonstop lyrics. The album doesn’t reinvent anything but it does pay homage to folk punk past, present and future. Hole In My Head is witty, melodic and fun without being glib or derivative. In other words, Laura Jane Grace continues to make banging music.

Delaney

13

The Jesus And Mary Chain

Glasgow Eyes

Fuzz Club Records

What I enjoy most about the Jesus and Mary Chain is arguably also their biggest flaw. The band’s slacker energy meets wall of feedback with a surprisingly melodic twist has always worked for me, but it kind of blurs together after a while. It’s kind of rainy day music – hence the classic “Happy When It Rains” off 1987’s Darklands. The band broke up in 1999, reforming in 2007. I listened to the 2017 comeback record and didn’t mind it, but never really dove in deep. Newly released in 2024, Glasgow Eyes sounds like classic JAMC, and that’s an accomplishment given how most reunions work out. It does sound a little different, too, of course. The modern production is bigger, louder, and cleaner – which could be divisive depending what you like about the group. It highlights their melodies more than the fuzz. Here, they’ve taken their classic sound and updated it with some modern flourishes that compliment rather than overpower. I wouldn’t use Glasgow Eyes to introduce people to the band, but this is still an enjoyable listen with a modern vibrancy that feels authentic.

Loren

14

Scrunchies

Colossal

Learning Curve Records

I’ve covered a lot of bands in the Scrunchies family tree in the past, so Colossal is pretty much what I expected. Yet, at the same time, it’s a slight turnaround in style for the band, who released Feral Coast in 2022, which was a punkier sound. Their third LP, on new label Learning Curve, Colossal takes a hard ‘90s turn while still sounding very much in the here and now. You’ll get feedback, shouted vocals, and loud guitars. It pays homage to some ‘90s classics of both the underground and the mainstream but it also features contemporary vocal trade-offs, more nuanced mixing, and lyricism reflective of the present. It’s also the one of the last recordings by Steve Albini. This record has it all if you’re a fan of loud rock ‘n’ roll with independent spirit. I’ll admit it didn’t strike as hard on the first couple of listens, but the closer you pay attention, the bigger and stronger it gets. Dare I say that it sounds, well, colossal?

 

Loren

15

Pinhead Gunpowder

Unt

1-2-3-4 Go!

The partially-active Aaron Cometbus band is back with a surprise new record that slows down the pace but maintains the group's magically blend of melodic punk and poignant lyricism. The album balances cynicism and positivity as only Cometbus records can.

16

Djevel

Natt Til Ende

Aftermath Music

It is difficult to believe that Djevel were formed in 2009. Pick any record in the Norwegian’s act discography and you would swear it was produced at the height of black metal’s creativity in the ‘90s. Still, their latest work, and the end in a trilogy, Natt Til Ende continues to be defined by the genre’s second wave. The point of reference here is Mayhem’s astounding De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas, from which Djevel draw all of their blasphemous, grand demeanor. It infects Natt Til Ende, from the big orating vocal delivery to the twisted, eerie melodies. Still, that is not where Djevel stop. They instead also draw influence from the more minimal sides of the genre, be it the laconic Darkthrone essence. At the same time, the magical quality, this obsession with the lunar and nocturnal brings memories of Ulver’s earliest days. While I am aware that I am mentioning some very big names here, this is the quality of Djevel. They stand by their influences and they live up to them.

Spyros Stasis

17

Spells

Past Our Prime

Big Neck Records, Keep It a Secret Records, Rad Girlfriend Records, Shield Recordings, Snappy Little Numbers

Calling your record Past Our Prime and then having a song named “Past My Prime” is messing with my head as I write this. But while there is no arguing that SPELLS are a self-aware band, that’s about as much as they’ll really mess with the listener on this record, titled (again), Past Our Prime. Musically speaking, the band play verse-chorus-verse peppy punk that’s anchored in the art of the singalong. The band frequently uses call and response, dual vocal tradeoffs and well-timed harmonies to keep the energy moving. The songs on Past Our Prime may often be about hardship, but the vibe is that we’re all on this crazy ride together so you may as well blow off some steam and have some fun while you’re at it. SPELLS is willing to let their hair down and have some fun. You should too.

Loren

18

Chat Pile

Cool World

The Flenser

Just look at the album cover to get a feel for Chat Pile's harsh take on modern middle America. The harsh death metal font meets a dreary suburban landscape. It's blunt and cold...and a much needed commentary.

19

Mouth Wound

Tallow

Handmade Birds

Mouth Wound is the project of artist extraordinaire, Trine Paaschburg, who dives head first into the intersection between dark ambient, noise, and industrial. Paaschburg has already been making some noise (no pun intended) with a few sparse releases, including her I Don't Know How To Fit Into This World Anymore EP, and her collaborations with blackened industrial noise fiends DemonologistsTallow strikes a fine balance between harshness and sentiment. Whether Paaschburg adheres to the balance or becomes consumed by one of the two sides is not relevant. The result in Tallow is stunning, and it is a work that exalts Mouth Wound, as Paaschburg makes her case for reaching the current extreme/experimental pantheon.

Spyros Stasis

20

Vicious Dreams

Turn Off My Brain

Brassneck Records, Dirt Cult, GC Records, Swamp Cabbage Records

Poppy punk from Florida, Vicious Dreams is a dual vocal trio who recently released Turn Off My Brain. This record follows the tried and true garage to rock to punk evolution of 4/4 songs with catchy choruses. What makes the group stand out is the way the two vocalists split duties and songwriting. It’s very clear when the songwriter changes, but not so much that it’s jarring. And sometimes the two styles come together and leave you dreaming of what’s to come. This record is short, fast and fun. It’s a pick-me-up in a scene that’s often focused on the negative and while it’s not perfect, I’m really intrigued where this band is headed. There are enough diverse (yet familiar) sounds on Turn Off My Brain that show a band still formulating its sound but I really like where it’s headed.

Loren

21

The Necks

Bleed

Northern Spy

Any record The Necks release is a pathway to a deeply meditative experience. From the vastness of Open to the cinematic introspection of Vertigo and the constant build-up of Unfold, this act rarely (if at all) disappoints. Their latest offering, Bleed, sees them return to their most delicate strand of minimalism, patiently weaving their compositions in an attempt to uncover something beautiful and profound within. With Bleed, The Necks have produced another stunning work of experimental minimalism. And yet, there is something different about Bleed than the Aussie trio's previous works. There is a sense of wonder and peace that stays with you after the record has concluded, inviting you to revisit its magical essence time and time. And that is an even bigger achievement.

Spyros Stasis

22

Peter Perrett

The Cleansing

Domino

Peter Perrett – The Cleansing weaves tales of seers and prophets foreboding the imminent future while celebrating yesteryear, magically engaging while melting the hands of time. Lyrically insightful, drawing the noose of yarns, letter by letter and word by word. Peter's clever pastiche dances around your palette like Dylan or Cohen. Essential!

Christopher D

23

Khirki

Κυκεώνας

Venerate Industries

After some initial hesitance I decided to give this second album by Khirki a chance. Let me tell you, halfway through the first song, this album and their debut  where in my basket. Khirki uses Greek folk influences and combine it with something uptempo that is somewhere between hard rock and metal. A couple of minutes in, I started to focus more on the drumming and let me tell you: if the musical description doesn’t sell this album to you, the drumming probably will! This album has had a lot of spins and I still return to it on a regular basis. A very deserved first place in my yearlist!

Dennis

24

Blood Incantation

Absolute Elsewhere

Century Media Records

There are moments on Absolute Elsewhere that are so mindboggling that their brilliance only unfolds after several, deeper listens to what is really going on in this death metal masterpiece. Masterpiece may sound like hyperbole, and yet it also doesn't seem like enough, with Blood Incantation pushing the outer limits of the genre further than most and still keeping the core true to its inspiration. Passages of curious progressive texture play against guttural roars and soaring solos, adding to the otherworldly aura that the band create. Absolute Elsewhere is a triumph, and that's putting it lightly.

Cheryl

25

Keygen Church

Nel Nome del Codice

Metal Blade Records

Imagine a gothic cathedral alive with the echoes of a pipe organ, a soaring choir, and chiptune metal ripping through its sacred halls—this is Nel Nome Del Codice. Keygen Church’s latest album doesn’t aim to reinvent music but rather perfects its fusion of grandiose ecclesiastical soundscapes and high-energy digital metal. Vittorio D’Amore’s bold inclusion of a monumental choir elevates tracks like “La Chiave Del Mio Amor” into breathtaking, cinematic epics. Every moment feels like a sacred ritual colliding with a digital apocalypse, balancing haunting, cathedral-like drama with electrifying intensity. The genius of the album lies in how effortlessly it blends the familiar—pipe organs, sacred choirs, and gothic aesthetics—with the unexpected edge of chiptune metal. The result is a soundscape that feels both reverent and rebellious, delivering a bold, immersive experience. It’s music with a dramatic flair that captures the imagination and demands to be heard in all its epic glory.

Robert Miklos (Piro)

26

Vial

Burnout

Get Better Records

They’re calling Vial indie-punk on the press releases I’m seeing. That’s probably as fair a description as any, as the DIY punk band covers a lot of sonic ground. What’s impressive is that on burnout, their second record, that varied sound all feels unified. The 10 songs here go from indie rock to angry punk to grungy to bouncy but, however it shifts from song to song, it manages the same core aesthetic. I’d simply call it punk, with strong influence from the riot grrl movement, but just as much interest in fun, party tunes as they have in loud, angry jams. Honestly, the songs here go by so fast that this feels more like an EP than LP to me, as a couple of one-minute jams feel more like transitional half-songs (that I still dig). The band also utilizes a fair amount of spoken word that’s borderline overdone. I like it in small doses, but they go back to the technique a little more often than this ear prefers. Ultimately though, “burn out” makes me feel energized instead of sick of it all. Well done, Vial.

Loren

27

Pearl Jam

Dark Matter

Monkey Wrench, Republic

When Pearl Jam dropped Gigaton in 2020 - a mere two weeks after the world shut down, there was a lot of fear and uncertainty about what track we were on as a society, and even as a species. We clung to whatever north star could guide us through those dark times. So it really says something that still, four long years later, the purveying theme of Pearl Jam’s latest album Dark Matter is fear. Dark Matter isn’t the return-to-form to the days of Yield like some may be hoping, but it serves as a reminder that as we continue to age, continue to lose those we love, and continue to fear, there can still be some things to look forward to and embrace.

Kevin Fitzpatrick

28

No Future

Mirror

Iron Lung

No Future are unleashing their debut record, following many short-fused, chaotic EPs and demos. The hardcore punk band from down under subscribes to the genre’s noisier, most extravagant, and brutal sub-division. Mirror’s energy is outright belligerent, capable of inflicting maximum damage with its minimalistic tendencies. The electrifying effect of “Silent Morality” is explosive, with a hi-hat sound capable of literal decapitation, it shatters everything around it. The songs here offer punishing, brutal psychedelia. It is an uncanny effect, an out-of-body experience that occurs at that very moment. This touch completes the harrowing, dark hardcore of No Future, and Mirror could not be a better introduction to this world of pain.

Spyros Stasis

29

KMPFSPRT

Aus Gegebenem Anlass

Rookie Records

This year' s best punk release, no doubt. Aus Gegebenem Anlass is KMPFSPRT’s sixth album, and their experience shows in their to-the-point songs with a poppy edge. They sound way more serious than the usual suspects when I think about pop-punk, but there is still a certain lightness too. I guarantee a high replay value!

Dennis

30

Vemod

The Deepening

Prophecy Productions

Waiting twelve years for an album from any band is a torture, waiting twelve years for a Vemod album is agony. The Norwegians have been working slowly on their second album since their debut of 2012, Venter på stormene, occasionally playing shows and teasing this new album only to leave us waiting and longing for more. With The Deepening, Vemod have moulded their black metal to fit the landscape of snow and ice that they call home. With passages of instrumental tones creating grand textures and layers of guitar bringing life to the cold vast space of the mountains. While black metal is the foundation of their sound, certainly, Vemod are not beholden to the genre in a way that restricts them and so this new album encompasses new pathways of sonic structure, and it does so with huge confidence.

Cheryl

Individual staff lists

Aaron H's list

  1. Bright Eyes – Five Dice, All Threes (Dead Oceans)
  2. Pearl Jam – Dark Matter (Monkey Wrench, Republic)
  3. Alkaline Trio – Blood, Hair, and Eyeballs (Rise)
  4. Green Day – Saviors (Reprise)
  5. Cursive – Devourer (Run For Cover)
  6. Hot Water Music – VOWS (Equal Vision)
  7. Beyonce – Cowboy Carter (Columbia)
  8. Chat Pile – Cool World (The Flenser)
  9. Frank Turner – Undefeated (Xtra Mile)
  10. Fucked Up – Another Day (Get Better)
  11. The Cure – Songs of a Lost World (Capitol, Fiction, Lost Music, Polydor/Universal)
  12. Dua Lipa – Radical Optimism (Warner)
  13. Sum 41 – Heaven X Hell (Rise)
  14. Touche Amore – Spiral in a Straight Line (Rise)
  15. Chuck Ragan – Love and Lore (Rise)
  16. Orville Peck – Stampede (Warner)
  17. Strung Out – Dead Rebellion (Fat Wreck)
  18. Grumpster – Grumpster (Pure Noise)
  19. Pinhead Gunpowder – Unt (1-2-3-4 Go!)
  20. Laura Jane Grace – Hole In My Head (Polyvinyl)

Cheryl's list

  1. Blood Incantation – Absolute Elsewhere (Century Media Records)
  2. Vemod – The Deepening (Prophecy Productions)
  3. Paysage d'Hiver – Die Berge (Kunsthall Produktionen)
  4. 40 Watt Sun – Little Weight (Cappio Records)
  5. Alcest – Les chants de l'aurore (Nuclear Blast)
  6. Schammasch – The Maldoror Chants: Old Ocean (Prosthetic Records)
  7. Skagos – Chariot Sun Blazing (Independent)
  8. Darkspace – Dark Space -II (Season Of Mist)
  9. The Cure – Songs of a Lost World (Capitol, Fiction, Lost Music, Polydor/Universal)
  10. Soror Dolorosa – Mond (Prophecy Productions)
  11. Borknagar – Fall (Century Media Records)
  12. Black Curse – Burning In Celestial Poison (Sepulchral Voice Records)
  13. Thou – Umbilical (Sacred Bones Records)
  14. Oranssi Pazuzu – Muuntautuja (Nuclear Blast)
  15. Spectral Wound – Songs of Blood and Mire (Profound Lore Records)
  16. Crypt Sermon – The Stygian Rose (Dark Descent Records)
  17. Doedsmaghird – Omniverse Consciousness (Peaceville Records)
  18. Spectral Voice – Sparagmos (Dark Descent)
  19. Djevel – Natt Til Ende (Aftermath Music)
  20. The Body – The Crying Out Of Things (Thrill Jockey)

Christopher D's list

  1. Peter Perrett – The Cleansing (Domino)
  2. Ultrabomb – Dying To Smile (DC-Jam Records)
  3. The Fallen Leaves – Simple Songs For Complex People (Parliament Records)
  4. The Sabrejets – The Restless Kind (Raucous Records)
  5. Sex Organs – We're Fucked (Voodoo Rhythm)
  6. Nick Lowe and Los Straitjackets – Indoor Safari (Yep Roc Records)
  7. The Bellrays – Heavy Steady Go! (Sweet Gee Records)
  8. Pat Todd & The Rankoutsiders – Keepin' Chaos At Bay (Hound Gawd! Records)
  9. The Jesus And Mary Chain – Glasgow Eyes (Fuzz Club Records)
  10. The MES – Evil Echo and Deaf Mind- (Independent)
  11. The Saints – The Saints ‎– (I'm) Stranded (In The Red Recordings)
  12. The Anomalys – Down The Hole (Slovenly Recordings)
  13. Rob Moss and Skin-Tight Skin – Records (Rock On Records)
  14. The Courettes – The Soul Of… The Fabulous Courettes (Damaged Goods)
  15. The Gits – Frenching The Bully (2024 Remaster) (Sub Pop Records)
  16. The Men – Manhattan Fire (Fuzz Club Records)
  17. Ichi-Bons – Get Away (Ugly Pop Records)
  18. Andy Blade + Buddies – Being Alive is Fun (Holy Dotage Records)
  19. Angel Face – Speedball/ Real Child (Lucky Records)
  20. Rick White And The Sadies – Rick White And The Sadies (Blue Fog)
  21. Tijuana Bibles ‎ – Undefeated - The Best Of The Tijuana Bibles (Hyperopia Records)
  22. Night Finger – Creepy Crawl (Trophy Records)
  23. Doctor Explosion – Vivir Sin Civilizar (Discos Perrotti)
  24. Verböten – Verböten (Self Released)
  25. Comateens – Danger Zone / Elizabeth's Lover (Left For Dead Records)
  26. 999 – Emergency At The Old Waldorf 1979 (Liberation Hall)
  27. Stephen Hamm – Songs Of The Future (Self Released)

Delaney's list

  1. Laura Jane Grace – Hole In My Head (Polyvinyl)
  2. Night Court – $hit Machine (Recess)
  3. Mannequin Pussy – I Got Heaven (Epitaph)
  4. Sprints – Letter to Self (City Slang)
  5. Uranium Club – Infants Under The Bulb (Anti Fade Records, Static Shock Records)
  6. Machine Girl – MG Ultra (Future Classic)
  7. Bambies – Snotty Angels (Spaghetty Town Records)
  8. Ekko Astral – pink balloons (Topshelf)
  9. Spells – Past Our Prime (Big Neck Records, Keep It a Secret Records, Rad Girlfriend Records, Shield Recordings, Snappy Little Numbers)
  10. Kim Gordon – The Collective (Matador)
  11. Pinhead Gunpowder – Unt (1-2-3-4 Go!)
  12. Sex Organs – We're Fucked (Voodoo Rhythm)
  13. The Sleeveens – The Sleeveens (Dirtnap)
  14. The Jesus And Mary Chain – Glasgow Eyes (Fuzz Club Records)
  15. Vicious Dreams – Turn Off My Brain (Brassneck Records, Dirt Cult, GC Records, Swamp Cabbage Records)
  16. Scrunchies – Colossal (Learning Curve Records)
  17. Ultrabomb – Dying To Smile (DC-Jam Records)
  18. Chat Pile – Cool World (The Flenser)
  19. Mouth Wound – Tallow (Handmade Birds)
  20. The Mocks – Do You Want Me Too? (Wap Shoo Wap Records)
  21. No Future – Mirror (Iron Lung)
  22. Verböten – Verböten (Self Released)
  23. Grumpster – Grumpster (Pure Noise)
  24. Bootlicker – 1000 Yd. Stare (Neon Taste Records, Static Shock Records)
  25. The Saints – The Saints ‎– (I'm) Stranded (In The Red Recordings)

Dennis's list

  1. Khirki – Κυκεώνας (Venerate Industries)
  2. KMPFSPRT – Aus Gegebenem Anlass (Rookie Records)
  3. Short Days – Direction Nowhere (Destructure Records)
  4. Desert Lily – Trapped In My Thoughts (White Russian Records)
  5. Conifère – L’Impôt Du Sang (Self Released)
  6. Viva Belgrado – Cancionero De Los Cielos (Fueled By Salmorejo)
  7. Sweat – Love Child (Vitriol)
  8. Shooting Daggers – Love & Rage (New Heavy Sounds)
  9. Neven – U Svakom Srcu Gore Svetla (Geenger Records)
  10. Svdestada – Candela (Pundonor Records, Fireflies Fall, Muerte Matar Records, Shove Records (2), Hecatombe Records, Gato Encerrado Records, Long Legs Long Arms, Frontal distribución, Hombre Montaña, Quebranta Records, Four Skulls, Sounds Like Sunday Records)
  11. Mountain Caller – Chronicle II: Hypergenesis (Church Road Records)
  12. No Future – Mirror (Iron Lung)
  13. Fatima – Eerie (Black Robes Records)
  14. Florida Men – Dive Bar (Morning Wood Records, Monster Zero Records)
  15. Slift – Ummon (Sub Pop Records)
  16. Nagasaki Sunrise – Distroyer (Tanayte! Records)
  17. Vicious Blade – Relentless Force (Redefining Darkness Records)
  18. Lasso – Parte (Sorry State Records)
  19. Kanonenfieber – Die Urkatastrophe (Century Media)
  20. Hell & Back – A Constant Buzz (Not Sorry Records)
  21. The Idoru – Undertow (Blackstarfoundation)
  22. Faucheuse – R​ê​ve Électrique (Symphony Of Destruction)
  23. Saturday Night Satan – All Things Black (Self Released)
  24. Lost Legion – Behind The Concrete Veil (Mendeku Diskak)
  25. Necrowretch – Sword Of Dajjal (Seasons Of Mist)

Loren's list

  1. Uranium Club – Infants Under The Bulb (Anti Fade Records, Static Shock Records)
  2. Vial – Burnout (Get Better Records)
  3. Sweat – Love Child (Vitriol)
  4. Faulty Cognitions – Somehow, We Are Here (Cercle Social Records)
  5. The Sleeveens – The Sleeveens (Dirtnap)
  6. MakeWar – A Paradoxical Theory of Change (Fat Wreck Chords)
  7. Scrunchies – Colossal (Learning Curve Records)
  8. Grumpster – Grumpster (Pure Noise)
  9. City Mouse – So Far Out (It's Alive Records)
  10. The Dreaded Laramie – Princess Feedback (Smartpunk Records)
  11. Shehehe – Namedroppers (Say-10)
  12. Assistert Sjølmord – Assistert Sjølmord (Static Shock Records)
  13. The Dopamines – 80/20 (Rad Girlfriend Records)
  14. Night Court – $hit Machine (Recess)
  15. Vicious Dreams – Turn Off My Brain (Brassneck Records, Dirt Cult, GC Records, Swamp Cabbage Records)
  16. Vacation – Rare Earth (Feel It Records)
  17. Spells – Past Our Prime (Big Neck Records, Keep It a Secret Records, Rad Girlfriend Records, Shield Recordings, Snappy Little Numbers)
  18. Totally Slow – The Darkness Intercepts (Refresh Records)
  19. Shellac – To All Trains (Touch and Go Records)
  20. The Umbrellas – Fairweather Friend (Slumberland Records)
  21. Clown Sounds – Par For The Curse (Recess)
  22. Swami & The Bed Of Nails – All Of This Awaits You (BMG, Swami)
  23. Massive Nightmares – Massive Nightmares (Independent)
  24. Pinhead Gunpowder – Unt (1-2-3-4 Go!)
  25. Chuck Ragan – Love and Lore (Rise)

Matt's list

  1. The Cure – Songs of a Lost World (Capitol, Fiction, Lost Music, Polydor/Universal)
  2. Laura Marling – Patterns In Repeat (Chrysalis / Partisan)
  3. Arooj Aftab – Night Reign (Verve)
  4. The Smile – Cutouts (XL)
  5. Bright Eyes – Five Dice, All Threes (Dead Oceans)
  6. Ekko Astral – pink balloons (Topshelf)
  7. Godspeed You! Black Emperor – No Title as of 13 February 2024 28,340 Dead (Constellation)

Robert Miklos (Piro)'s list

  1. Keygen Church – Nel Nome del Codice (Metal Blade Records)
  2. Kashiwa Daisuke – ICE (Independent)
  3. Lowen – Do Not Go To War With The Demons Of Mazandaran (Church Road Records)
  4. Sans Froid – Hello, Boil Brain (Independent)
  5. Kessaconda – Outerstate (Gondwana Records)
  6. Nala Sinephro – Endlessness (Warp Records)
  7. Varijashree Venugopal – Vari (GroundUP Music)
  8. Caroline Shaw & So Percussion – Rectangles and Circumstance (Nonesuch Records Inc.)
  9. Alora Crucible – Oak Lace Apparition (Independent)
  10. Jaubi – A Sound Heart (Riaz Records)
  11. Mindex – Integration (Time Resonance)
  12. Midas Fall – Cold Waves Divide Us (Monotreme Records)
  13. Anciients – Beyond the Reach of the Sun (Season of Mist)
  14. Meer – Wheels Within Wheels (Karisma Records)
  15. Renesans – Born from the End (Independent)
  16. Anoice – Stories in White (Ricco Label)
  17. Night Verses – Every Sound Has A Color In The Valley Of Night (Rude Records)
  18. Eyot – Quindecennial (Ropeadope Records)
  19. Marzuku – Fraudulence Custom Campaign Vol. 1 (Independent)
  20. Squarepusher – Drostotime (Warp Records)
  21. Sungazer – Against the Fall of Night (Independent)
  22. Delving – All Paths Diverge (Stickman Records)
  23. Questing Beast – Birth (Independent)
  24. Fauxdeep – Then You'll Go Home (violentweather)
  25. Make Them Suffer – Make Them Suffer (Sharptone)

Spyros Stasis's list

  1. The Necks – Bleed (Northern Spy)
  2. Spectral Voice – Sparagmos (Dark Descent)
  3. Uboa – Impossible Light (Flenser)
  4. Mitochondrion – Vitriseptome (Profound Lore)
  5. Djevel – Natt Til Ende (Aftermath Music)
  6. Ulvtharm – 7 Uthras (Cyclic Law)
  7. Defeated Sanity – Chronicles of Lunacy (Season of Mist)
  8. Økse – Økse (Backwoodz Recordz)
  9. Mouth Wound – Tallow (Handmade Birds)
  10. Mefitis – The Skorian / The Greyleer (Profound Lore)
  11. Lussuria – Under Crumbled Stairs (Hospital Productions)
  12. Fir – De Stilte van God (Tour De Garde)
  13. Buñuel – Mansuetude (Overdrive, SKiN GRAFT)
  14. Balwezo Westijiz – Tower of Famine (Profound Lore)
  15. Final – What We Don't See (Room40)
  16. Slimelord – Chytridiomycosis Relinquished (20 Buck Spin)
  17. Merzbow & Meat Beat Manifesto – Extinct (Cold Spring)
  18. Dissimulator – Lower Form Resistance (20 Buck Spin)
  19. Pharmakon – Maggot Mass (Sacred Bones)
  20. Sumac – The Healer (Thrill Jockey)
  21. Lustmord – Much Unseen Is Also Here (Pelagic)
  22. Malconfort – Humanism (Transcending Obscurity)
  23. Post Scriptvm – Eisstoß (Tesco Organisation)
  24. Wormed – Omegon (Season of Mist)
  25. Beak> – >>>> (2024) (Invada, Temporary Residence)
Scene Point Blank's Favorites: Year End (2024)
Scene Point Blank's Favorites: Year End (2024)

Series: Year End 2024

Our roundup of the best music—and more—of 2024.

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2024: A Year In Review

Music / Year End 2024 • January 13, 2025

It's a new year – hooray. And things are off to a fine start, too. If the thought of corrupt governments, AI domination, unmoderated social networks and endless war is causing you to retreat into the past, we don't blame you. In fact, we encourage it! Our writers have summed … Read more

Pass The Mic: Artists and labels on 2024

Music / Year End 2024 • January 4, 2025

It's a SPB tradition to formally "pass the mic" to our artist and label friends to tell us about their year in music. What albums did they enjoy? What shows did they see? What are they looking forward to for the new year? We're joined this year by a host … Read more

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More from this section

2024: A Year In Review

Music / Year End 2024 • January 13, 2025

It's a new year – hooray. And things are off to a fine start, too. If the thought of corrupt governments, AI domination, unmoderated social networks and endless war is causing you to retreat into the past, we don't blame you. In fact, we encourage it! Our writers have summed … Read more

Pass The Mic: Artists and labels on 2024

Music / Year End 2024 • January 4, 2025

It's a SPB tradition to formally "pass the mic" to our artist and label friends to tell us about their year in music. What albums did they enjoy? What shows did they see? What are they looking forward to for the new year? We're joined this year by a host … Read more

Red Scare Industries - History 101

Music / History 101 • December 10, 2024

Hey folks, Toby here, and the SPB team asked me to provide some insights about some stuff from our catalog now that Red Scare is (you gotta be shittin’ me?!) twenty years old. Specifically a “memory or modern take” on some past releases, and they picked some doozies, so let’s … Read more