The sun is hot, but the tunes are hotter. We're only halfway through 2024, and some of the biggest names in have already released albums.
Thatâs as good a reason as any to take stock of this year's releases. Here are The Associated Press' picks for the yearâs best...so far.
POP POWERHOUSES:
BeyoncĂ©, âAct II: Cowboy Carterâ
It is rare for a pop album to function as a catchy body of work and an accessible masterclass on an underserved and undercelebrated history. But on BeyoncĂ©âs epic , she accomplishes just that. Across the release, B positions herself in opposition to country musicâs rigid power structures and educates listeners on its origins in Black music.
Taylor Swift, âThe Tortured Poets Departmentâ
ł§·ÉŸ±ŽÚłÙâs is an amalgamation of her moody synth-pop (as heard on ) and literary folk compositions ( and âfolkloreâ) â the direct result of an artist who has spent the last few years re-recording her lifeâs work and touring its material. Storytelling is at the fore, delivered through an ascendant vocal run or an elegiac verse that highlight her narrative powers.
Billie Eilish, âHit Me Hard and Softâ
·ĄŸ±±ôŸ±Čőłóâs is stacked with rewarding fake outs. Like in the opener âSkinny,â which launches into the saccharine falsetto of her award-winning âBarbieâ ballad âWhat Was I Made For?â only to abandon the format for the pulsating pop and sapphic yearning of âLunch.â There is techno and hyperpop, acoustic ballads and a return to her gothic vaudeville.
Ariana Grande, âeternal sunshineâ
For Grandeâs , the pop singer teamed up with the mysterious Swedish hitmaker Max Martin for a collection of songs that range from earworm hooks filtered â90s house music (âyes, and?â), wobbly â00s R&B pop (âTrue Storyâ), Y2K revivalism (âThe Boy Is Mine,â inspired by the Brandy and Monica classic) and Robyn-esque euro-pop (âwe canât be friends (wait for your love).â)
Shakira, âLas Mujeres Ya No Lloranâ
In the seven years since Shakiraâs last album, she separated from soccer player Gerard PiquĂ©, leading to what sheâs called the âdissolution of my family," and she faced charges of tax evasion in Spain. But she on âLas Mujeres Ya No Lloran,â from the bachata âMonotonĂaâ to the electro-pop âTe Felicitoâ to the mega viral âShakira: Bzrp Music Sessions, Vol. 53â and beyond.
HONORABLE MENTION: âRadical Optimism,â Kacey Musgraves, âDeeper Well,â
RAP RENASSIANCE:
Chief Keef, âAlmighty So 2â
Something shifted when Chief Keef released his âAlmighty Soâ mixtape in 2013. The exemplar of Chicago drill, the rap subgenre that would define its moment, Chief Keef was a viral teenager whose sound would be heard round the world. Eleven years later, his long-teased sequel, âAlmighty So 2â delivers with the immediacy of the first â but it is markedly different. Keef has never sounded more polished, more professional â but he stays true to himself.
Schoolboy Q, âBlue Lipsâ
On his sixth album, the LA rapper Schoolboy Q pushes himself to traverse new, unexpected territory â five years since 2019âs âCrash Talk,â and undeniably worth the wait. There are good time tracks (âTHank god 4 meâ) and songs of disruption (âGermany â86â). It makes for an interesting tension â and room for discovery with each listen.
Sexyy Red, âIn Sexyy We Trustâ
Last yearâs âHood Hottest Princessâ introduced listeners everywhere to a young, hot new Midwest MC â a fearless, funny rapper by the name Sexyy Red. This year, sheâs followed it up with a mixtape, âIn Sexyy We Trust,â a not-safe-for-work collection of bright, horny rap records. If you thought she was going to settle for just one viral moment, guess again.
HONORABLE MENTION: Future and Metro Boomin, âWe Donât Trust You,â Young Miko, âAtt.,â Vince Staples, âDark Timesâ
RULEBREAKERS:
Charli XCX, âBratâ
English pop singer-songwriter oscillates between hedonism and anxiety â the euphoria of a late night on the dancefloor and the creeping disquietude of the morning after â as much as it does her in-between status as pop queen of the underground and sometimes mainstream success story. As âBratâ summer swings in full force, it seems like sheâs leaning more and more to the latter.
Kali Uchis, âOrquĂdeasâ
On her fourth studio album, the largely (âOrchidsâ in English), Colombian American singer Kali Uchisâ ability to create lush, fluid sonic worlds reaches new heights. On âOrquĂdeas,â it is all sultry songs about love, loss and divination. These are self-possessed songs across a spectrum of heritages, made cohesive through her unique filter.
RM, âRight Place, Wrong Personâ
The thoughtful leader of , RM is usually philosophical in his solo work, unafraid to take big sonic risks, sometimes with big rewards. On his second solo album, RM continues to ask the big questions atop elastic, genre-averse production, from the wet, funky bass of âNuts,â the avant-garde âAround the world in a dayâ to the surprising shoegaze of âHeaven.â
HONORABLE MENTION: Carin LeĂłn, âBoca Chueca, Vol. 1,â Brittney Spencer, âMy Stupid Life,â Ălvaro DĂaz, âSayonara,â Ayra Starr, âThe Year I Turned 21,â , âWhere Iâve Been, Isnât Where Iâm Goingâ
ALBUMS YOU MIGHTâVE MISSED:Cindy Lee, âDiamond Jubileeâ
Where did âDiamond Jubileeâ come from? Cindy Lee â the drag alter-ego of Womenâs Patrick Flegel, a fixture of Canadian indie rock since the early 2010s â released this lo-fi gem as an unmarked YouTube link. It meant listeners had to sink into its psych and garage rock in full â all two hours and 32-minutes. Itâs unusual that an album this surprising, expansive and beneath the mainstream manages to break out onto best of lists.
Waxahatchee, âTigers Bloodâ
The indie artist Waxahatchee, known for her gut-wrenching alt-country, demonstrates mastery of her craft on her sixth studio album, Waxahatchee, the musical moniker of Katie Crutchfield, is at her most evocative when documenting everyday realities. âTigers Bloodâ finds simple joys; gone are tortured emotions and self-doubt communicated through distorted riffs of her previous work. Start with âRight Back to It,â featuring , which moves from country to indie rock seamlessly. Itâs about easing into the later years of a steady and reliable relationship â and it sounds exciting.
Mannequin P----, âI Got Heavenâ
Philadelphia punk band Mannequin P---- have never been accused of being restrained. On their latest album, âI Got Heaven,â ferociousness, self-assurance and desire are one in the same. The band moves from lust and fear (âI Got Heavenâ) to dominance (âLoud Barkâ) and freedom (âAchingâ), playing with Christian lyricism and sexuality in the same breath. It makes for a high-octane listen â not for the faint of heart, but certainly for anyone looking for an energizing record that moves from dreamy pop to abrasive hardcore with ease.
Adrianne Lenker, âBright Futureâ
It may be the summer, but this sounds like spring. Big Thiefâs Adrianne Lenkerâs fifth solo album is simple, sparse, and singular. Her folk-y vocal tone, immediately recognizable to her most devoted listeners, is time-honored â with little more than an acoustic guitar and a harmony, she composes elegant songs with a classic sensibility. Sometimes, the most thoughtful creations utilize the fewest tools.
HONORABLE MENTION: Kim Gordon, âThe Collective,â Hurray for the Riff Raff, âThe Past Is Still Alive,â Modu Moctar, âFuneral for Justiceâ
Maria Sherman, The Associated Press