25 September 2025
Here's how it works: The Recent Releases chart brings together critical reaction to new albums from more than 50 sources worldwide. It's updated daily. Albums qualify with 5 reviews, and drop out after 6 weeks into the longer timespan charts.
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Debut full-length release from the Los Angeles singer-songwriter and daughter of director JJ Abrams produced by The National's Aaron Dessner
7.3
Distilling everything into its purest form, it’s a debut that perfectly illustrates the transcendent quality of very special songwriting Read Review
The 23-year-old addresses the trials of squaring love with life on the road on her moving and contemplative debut Read Review
A gut-wrenching yet joyous journey into the thick of her every feeling Read Review
Although she sings as though she’s trying to heal deep wounds, it feels like Gracie Abrams has created a space to heal on her debut record. Closing with ‘Right Now’, she shares with listeners: “I feel like myself right now” Read Review
Where the record really shines is when she turns her attention to new love Read Review
The artist’s full-length debut is an honest step forward, but emotional vulnerability can’t save it from the clichés of confessional songwriting Read Review
Good Riddance is a middling set of songs whose highlights are hard to pick out. There’s talent here, just not used in a way where it calls immediate attention to itself: the whispering vocals and similar instrumentals all seem to just weigh the project down Read Review
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Geese Getting Killed
A carefully crafted and expansive release from a group of young musicians truly coming of age DIY
Getting Killed is an instant classic that only a band as nuts as Geese could compose Northern Transmissions
The NYC band’s apocalyptic third album is a deeply exciting, provoking, and necessary gulf of no-fuss rock music Paste Magazine
The band’s best effort yet Under The Radar
The Brooklyn quartet’s third album brings a sense of unerring chaos to a work that is exciting, creative and wondrously strange musicOMH
The curveballs keep flying through the climactic triptych - the Kid A-evoking eruption "Bow Down", the incantatory "Taxes" and the hallucinogenic "Long Island City Here I Come". Print edition only Uncut
A third album bursting with intense energy and sparkling invention. Print edition only Mojo
Getting Killed is certainly several cuts above some other recent offerings from cultural scroungers, but you can't help but remember we were all charmed by Kings of Leon for a while too Exclaim
There’s a lot going on across the five-piece’s erratic but original third album, yet it never feels like they’re losing control of the chaos NME
NewDad Altar
Altar’ might be about sacrifice, but NewDad have given up none of their magic; if anything, they’ve honed it Dork
Lola Young I'm Only F**king Myself
There’s no tidy resolution here; just a brilliant songwriter turning self-sabotage and late-night decisions into some of the most distinct, personality-packed pop around Dork
Jade That's Showbiz Baby!
Jade isn’t just trying to step out of a shadow; she’s pulling the curtain down and setting the scenery alight. It’s loud, gaudy, dazzling, sometimes absurd – and absolutely alive. If this is the debut, imagine the encore. That’s showbiz, baby Dork
Wednesday Bleeds
These American tales are sad, and maybe even a little funny Beats Per Minute
Suede Antidepressants
Somewhat of a companion piece to The Cure’s Songs of a Lost World, Antidepressants will not only be a new favourite of Suede fans, but also open a new audience up to them Beats Per Minute
Cardi B AM I THE DRAMA?
Seven years on from her riotous debut, Cardi doubles down on bravado but drowns it in overlong tracks and half-baked collabs NME
Since we've been around, that is. So, the highest-rated albums from the past twelve years or so. Rankings are calculated to two decimal places.
Kendrick Lamar To Pimp A Butterfly
Fiona Apple Fetch The Bolt Cutters
Kendrick Lamar Damn.
D'Angelo And The Vanguard Black Messiah
Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds Ghosteen
Spiritbox Tsunami Sea
Self Esteem Prioritise Pleasure
Bob Dylan Rough and Rowdy Ways
Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds Skeleton Tree
Frank Ocean Channel Orange