Tiffany Poon takes a geographical turn focusing on French composers for her second album, Nature. The care she brought to Diaries Schumann shows up here as well.
Hooverphonic, The Magnificent Tree
For the longest time, I thought the only thing I needed from Hooverphonic was their cover of “Shake the Disease” on the tribute album For the Masses. I was wrong.
Miguel, CAOS
The title of this album is an apt description for the songs therein, but they don’t get too out of hand to lose focus.
Rosalía, LUX
The orchestrations on this album are phenomenal, but I think Rosalía could study Shiina Ringo’s Karuki Zaamen Kuri no Hana for a lesson on how to keep ambitions in check. This album would be more impactful with a short running time.
Black Country, New Road, Forever Howlong Geese, Getting Killed National of Language, Dance Called Memory
I’ll admit I had to do some fourth quarter catch-up on these albums, so they’re indelibly tied in mind due to context-switching. In the case of Forever Howlong and Getting Killed, these albums flex ambition that wouldn’t sound out of place next to a Shiina Ringo or Naked City album, just a bit tempered. Dance Called Memory, meanwhile, evokes an age familiar to anyone who grew up in the Reagan years.
As much as I liked these albums, I didn’t discover them early enough in the year to dislodge the favorites I’ve already ranked. I was also listening to Dijon’s Baby, which did manage to break into the year-end list. Getting Killed garnered a lot of acclaim, but I perceive it as a less-fun version of Parquet Court’s Wide Awake!
Tortoise, Touch
I bet this album might have also ranked higher on the Favorite Edition 2025 list if it had just come out slightly earlier in the year.
In the past, I would try to write about every album I encountered. These days, I listen to a lot of stuff, but I’ll only post an entry if something sparks a memory.
As these statistics demonstrate, I’m leaving a lot out of this blog.
First and last purchases of the year
The first and last purchases of the year are determined by the date of order. Pre-ordered items not yet shipped have already been taken into account.
First purchase: Sigur Ros, Inni on CD.
First purchase of a 2025 release: Sam Amidon, Salt River on CD.
Last purchase of a 2025 release: Olivia Rodrigo, Live From Glastonbury on CD
Last purchase: Wayne Horvitz, Simple Facts on vinyl.
Purchases by format
Format
New release
Reissue
Catalog
Total
7-inch
0
0
0
0
10-inch
1
2
0
3
12-inch
2
1
0
3
Blu ray
0
1
0
1
CD Single
0
0
0
0
CD
56
34
270
360
CD-R
0
0
0
0
Downloads
13
14
0
27
DVD
0
0
1
1
Vinyl
30
53
121
204
Total items bought
102
105
392
599
Definitions
New release
Initial release within the calendar year.
Reissue
Originally released prior to the calendar year but reissued within the calendar year.
Catalog
Initial release prior to the calendar year.
Top catalog release years
Year
Number of items purchased
Year-over-year change
1995
22
New!
2005
21
New!
1998
20
New!
1993
20
New!
2024
19
New!
1994
18
New!
2004
17
-2
2001
17
-1
2000
16
New!
Top artists
Single titles purchased in multiple formats are counted individually.
Artist
Number of items purchased
SYML
11
Sting
9
John Zorn
8
Eponymous 4
7
k.d. lang
7
Wayne Horvitz
7
Bruce Springsteen
6
Public Image Ltd.
5
Sigur Rós
5
Thievery Corporation
5
Notes
SYML has fully embraced the notion of releasing a steady stream of music to placate the streaming overloads.
I show up as Eponymous 4 because of a reissue campaign I started in 2023, and it’s picking up pace.
John Zorn held out on streaming for the longest time, but now that Tzadik release appear on streaming, I can figure out which of his numerous releases I want to own physically.
I’m not going to dissect what brought me back to this album again and again. I just don’t have the vocabulary to analyze hip-hop the way I do with rock or classical music. But I know there was an emotional core to Let God Sort ‘Em Out that transcended the swagger intrinsic to hip-hop. Also, I just like hearing, “This is culturally inappropriate.”
Kendrick Lamar, GNX
Why is this album showing up on a 2025 list when it was released in late 2024? Because I had already locked up my 2024 list, and the physical release of the album happened in 2025. The bona fides of this album have already been well-established, and I have little to add to what’s already been said.
Amanda Shires, Nobody’s Girl
We heard both sides of the split between Amanda Shires and Jason Isbell this year, and as far as a listening experience is concerned, I throw my hat in with Shires. “The Details” is uncomfortably honest, and the determination that comes through these songs leaves an impression long after the album ends.
Tyler Childers, Snipe Hunter
I just love the range of subject matter Childers tackles on this album.
Parlando / Ian Niederhoffer, Censored Anthems
Dmitri Shostakovich is the marquee composer in this collection, but he takes the least amount of running time. Rather, the focus centers on Mieczyslaw Weinberg’s Concertino for Violin and Edvard Mirzoyan’s Symphony for Strings. Paired with Shostakvoich’s Adagio from Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk, Censored Anthems would make for a fine evening at the concert hall.
SYML, Nobody Lives Here
“The White Light of the Morning” is magical realism rendered in song, and it pretty much epitomizes the album’s ethos.
Turnstile, NEVER ENOUGH
Yeah, I’m still a sucker for a good new wave beat, but I wouldn’t call this hardcore.
Dijon, Baby
I don’t think my teen-aged self would believe you if you told him one day, R&B artists would sound skronkier and noiser than your favorite downtown New York jazz artist.
Kathleen Edwards, Billionaire
Jason Isbell and Gena Johnson produced this album, and Isbell contributes some beefy guitar solos. Edwards descends from a line of singer-songwriters originated by Lucinda Williams, and Johnson and Isbell coaxed out some of Edwards’ strongest writing and singing to date.
Henki Skidu, Spring Water
Henki Skidu is the alias of Henry Koperski, a frequent collaborator of Las Culturistas’ Matt Rogers. He takes on the mic on this set of rustic folk-pop tunes. Like GNX, it was release a week before the end of 2024, so it was just easier to put this album on the 2025 list.
With the late 1980s and early 1990s approaching landmark anniversaries, deluxe reissues are already starting to crowd the release schedule. This retrospective usually focuses on catalog albums I’ve discovered for the first time, but my attention has been diverted to these reissues. So I’ll cover both.
Reissues
Bruce Springsteen, Nebraska ’82
Electric Nebraska is pretty much the big draw for this reissue. Nebraska is a master class in sparseness, but the previously unreleased version of the album with a full band bears little relation to its source material. You also get the sense ditching these sessions was absolutely the correct decision.
Robert Palmer, Live at the Apollo
Recorded in 1988 and released in 2001, this live album also serves as a succinct retrospective of Palmer’s diverse career. Some of the post-production feels a bit forced, but Palmer’s performance cuts through.
U2, How to Re-Assemble an Atomic Bomb
How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb is U2 at it’s most average. That’s not a knock — it’s a good album, but it won’t compete against The Joshua Tree or Achtung Baby for clout. It’s also miles from the terribleness of Pop or No Line on the Horizon. So it’s an amazing feat that U2 could take the outtakes of that album’s sessions and fashion a completely different album out of it. Perhaps even a better one?
Steve Reich, Collected Works
Similar to Nonesuch’s comprehensive retrospective for John Adams, Collected Works assembles recordings from outside the label’s catalog to offer a thorough survey of Steve Reich’s recorded oeuvre. This beautifully packaged boxed set fills any holes in a Reich completist’s shelf.
Sting, The Dream of the Blue Turtles Sting, … Nothing Like the Sun
Sting’s ambivalence to mining his archive is clear. Deluxe editions of early albums showed only on streaming services in the US. Physical releases of those same editions have so far only appeared in Japan. And all of these reissues contain a lot of remixes that feel fairly off-brand for Sting. I still rank them as important for bringing B-sides from these albums to a digital format. The … Nothing Like the Sun B-sides were my personal holy grail, and they had never seen even a CD reissue till now.
Catalog
Little Anthony and the Imperials, Goin’ Out of my Head
I didn’t realize Linda Ronstadt had actually covered “Hurt So Bad,” and the original recording by Little Anthony and the Imperials gives such a different energy from Ronstadt’s pleading. It’s bittersweet with just a hint of psychosis. Goin’ Out of My Head holds together as a solid album at a time when albums were still mostly a compilation of singles.
w.o.d., Ai
NOTE: “Ai” is a Romanized transliteration of the Japanese word for “love.” It is not an acronym.
Opening theme songs for the anime BLEACH tended to be promotion vehicles for alt-rock artists on the Sony Entertainment roster, and more times than not, they contributed little to the episode itself. That’s not the case for BLEACH: Thousand Year Blood War. The opening songs establish the tone for the story, and “Stars” by w.o.d. is the best so far. I found myself going back to Ai when I needed a hit of dopamine. It’s a raw album that’s rougher around the edges than alt-rock in Japan is known for.
These Trails, These Trails
My piano instructor in college asked me to review this album, on which he was a producer. But I had to hand the album back to him after the review was published. Hawaiian music doesn’t traditionally have a rebel streak giving the social norm for harmony and conformity intrinsic to Hawaii’s culture. These Trails offers a glimpse of what could happen if Hawaiian music did embrace more experimentalism. There’s an unmistakable hippie vibe to this album, but it’s married well with its Hawaiian influences.
DO AS INFINITY, EIGHT
DO AS INFINITY definitely came from a Japanese pop lineage, but with Owatari Ryo’s guitar driving the music, they bridge the Avex Trax dance world with the more underground influences of Shiina Ringo, Cocco and SUPERCAR. I listened to EIGHT when it was first released but never got around to owning it. Revisiting the album more than a decade later spurred me to add it to my physical collection. The album has aged the least in the band’s discography, offering their best writing and performances over a career spanning two decades.
Kaji Meiko, Yadokari
It’s not hard to figure out why Quinten Tarantino featured Kaji Meiko’s music prominently in the Kill Bill movies. Kaji struck a delicate balance between enka, kayoukyoku and spaghetti western soundtracks to produce some compelling music. And I’m not much of an enka fan.