16 July 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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Second album from Brooklyn alternative hip hop trio
7.9
It isn’t the humor that’s so refreshing about this duo—rap has always been funny—it’s what they do with it Read Review
DR are simply a few guys approaching rap from an irreverent and fractured angle, unremittingly questioning its conventions while still managing to equal or eclipse its best moments Read Review
Sit Down, Man is an infinitely entertaining result of extreme reverence toward rap and irreverence toward everything else, themselves included Read Review
Victor Vazquez and Himanshu Suri are rap nerds who uncoil verses crammed with obscure, wide-ranging references and cutting social observation Read Review
Are beyond tongue-in-cheek. What they're not beyond is tackling race and the general lull rap music faces in 2010 Read Review
If there’s any weakness to Das Racist, it’s that occasionally you can tell that they’re still working on the noble balancing act between silly and serious Read Review
They're a Beastie Boys for the Tea Party era Read Review
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Wet Leg moisturizer
Rhian Teasdale and Hester Chambers have cracked the British charts with their playful sounds The FT
These are love songs for people who don't want to fall in love, made by a band that sounds more comfortable in its skin than ever All Music
Gwenno Utopia
This is artistic progression, and while some might miss the old, more fun, version of Gwenno, the more mature and serious version isn't half bad All Music
Sophomore slump? Not a chance. Wet Leg are only getting stranger, louder, and better – moisturised, refreshed, and ready to wreak more havoc Dork
‘moisturizer’ sees the band consolidate their position and create a more stable platform to kick on from in the future XS Noize
The Isle of Wight band’s sophomore outing is slutty, sensitive, sadistic, and superb Paste Magazine
Clipse Let God Sort Em Out
It's not the classic many of us were hoping for, but Let God Sort Em Out is a bombastic, unhinged and bitter reflection on modern hip-hop from two of the game's most creative and vicious MCs Exclaim
Growth isn’t always fun, but if Wet Leg’s development from one album to the next is this impressive, they’ll be able to channel maturity and snide detachment simultaneously before we know it Spectrum Culture
An English language work from an artist known for singing minority languages sacrifices creative bravery for a more sophisticated production sheen Spectrum Culture
BC Camplight A Sober Conversation
Brian Christinzio’s album about the source of his ongoing issues with addiction and depression combines real pain, jokes and incisive observations Spectrum Culture
Lorde Virgin
The voice that scored the coming-of-age of a generation of girls in the 2010s sounds most at home in the city that celebrates expression and self-discovery as much for the confusing journey as for the destination—New York is exactly where Lorde needs to be Spectrum Culture
Perhaps that’s why this 'difficult second album' is such a success - there’s neither complacency nor conformity here The Arts Desk
Ty Segall Possession
It’s psych-pop-rock that doesn’t need to be groundbreaking to be satisfying Under The Radar
If moisturizer feels a little unhinged at times, that’s because it is. Occasionally, it tries a bit too hard and doesn’t quite capture the chaotic charm of the debut, which still stands as the stronger release Under The Radar
Justin Bieber Swag
The album serves more as a platform for empty self-aggrandizement than self-reflection Slant Magazine
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
Spiritbox Tsunami Sea
Kendrick Lamar Damn.
D'Angelo And The Vanguard Black Messiah
Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds Ghosteen
Self Esteem Prioritise Pleasure
Bob Dylan Rough and Rowdy Ways
Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds Skeleton Tree
Frank Ocean Channel Orange