The hottest music from Chicago & beyond

Tag: listmas 2024

The Top 50 Albums of 2024

The pain that comes with selecting your favorite albums of any given year is one most music lovers shouldn’t have to deal with. Of course a majority aren’t critics or writers or even care enough to bother with list-making, so you simply love what you love and keep it to yourself. Or maybe only share some key selections with close friends and family. Here at Faronheit HQ, sharing is caring. The understanding is that you probably don’t have the time or energy to spend listening to album after album, particularly if you have life responsibilities such as a demanding job or children. Hopefully a year-end music recap functions more as a saving grace – a quick reference point that gives you all the highlights in one swoop so you can play catch-up really easily. Of course all tastes are subjective, so what one person loves another may not.

There were a lot of great albums released in 2024. So much so, that my typical “Honorable Mention” section felt like it should be expanded to 15 instead of the standard 10, for a grand total of 65 records that make up the year’s best. And that’s with the knowledge I didn’t get to hear every single album released this year and probably missed some great ones as a result. But in a general sense, I’d like to think the records listed here encapsulate the “sound of 2024” quite well, and in a decade or two it’ll still hold up. Poptimism took a big step forward thanks to Sabrina Carpenter and Charli XCX. Kendrick Lamar, Vampire Weekend, and Father John Misty all made exceptional records following previous weaker entries in their catalogs. Then you’ve got some artists who feel like they’re on their way to superstardom, such as Doechii, Being Dead, Fievel Is Glauque, and Dummy. This list is so packed, I feel forced to apologize to Beyoncé and The Cure for placing them outside of the main list. Choices needed to be made!

If you haven’t heard all of these albums, and I generally assume you haven’t, please do yourself a favor and check some of them out. You’ll hopefully be pleasantly surprised, and might even discover a new favorite. And if you do love a record, please show some real love and support to the artists that made it. Spotify barely pays for streaming, so buy a vinyl or CD copy of the album because it’ll put more money into the pockets of the creatives. Go see some of this music performed live, too. Buying a concert ticket and/or merch is another great way to return the favor this music is giving to you. Then of course, share it with others so they can experience the magic of discovery too. Having said all that, please enjoy Faronheit’s Top 50 Albums of 2024 list below. Once you’ve taken it all in, let me know your thoughts! Reach out on social media to let me know what’s missing, because if I end up loving a record as much as you do, we’ll continue to build the fandom together.

This wraps up coverage for 2024. Cheers to a new year and more great music ahead!

Honorable Mention
Beyoncé – Cowboy Carter
Cassandra Jenkins – My Light, My Destroyer
The Cure – Songs of a Lost World
Dehd – Poetry
Ekko Astral – pink balloons
Erika de Casier – Still
Fine – Rocky Top Ballads
Godspeed You! Black Emperor – “NO TITLE AS OF 13 FEBRUARY 2024 28,340 DEAD”
Hovvdy – Hovvdy
Ka – The Thief Next to Jesus
Lip Critic – Hex Dealer
Merce Lemon – Watch Me Drive Them Dogs Wild
Rapsody – Please Don’t Cry
Shellac – To All Trains
Wishy – Triple Seven

The Top 100 Songs of 2024

What can I say about this year in music? I would typically toss off some sentiment about how it’s been pretty good overall, maybe even better than expected. It comes from a place of honest belief, because there’s just so much music released in any given year you can always find something new to love. If you can’t, then you’re probably just not looking hard enough. I can probably count on one hand the number of times I’ve been disappointed with a majority of releases in a given year. Even when the bigger names or zeitgeisty artists fail to deliver, a smaller artist or band is right there to pick up the slack. So yes, 2024 was another strong one for music.

Singles in particular stood out to me this year more than albums as a whole, even though you’ll see plenty of crossover between the “Best Songs” and “Best Albums” lists. But think about it for a minute. Kendrick Lamar’s “Not Like Us” was an inspiration that flourished from his diss track battle with Drake and wasn’t on the album he’d release near the end of the year. Chappell Roan’s “Good Luck, Babe!” was a one-off single that wasn’t on her album from last year with all the other hits. Addison Rae finally gave us a song worth listening to more than once with “Diet Pepsi”, and Disclosure’s “She’s Gone, Dance On” also isn’t connected to an album, though both tracks will probably appear on as-yet-unannounced 2025 albums. There are plenty more examples, from SZA to Panda Bear to ANOHNI and the Johnsons who gave us some very worthwhile singles this year. They all appear on the Top 100 Songs of 2024 list, which you can find below.

The “rules” of this list are simple. To qualify, a song must have been released at some point in the calendar year of 2024, so album advance singles released in fall 2023 are not eligible. Lastly, no lead artist may be included more than once, though featured guests do not count toward this total. The idea is to spread the love around and ideally introduce you to songs you might not have heard otherwise. It gives a leg up to those smaller names like Brennan Wedl, Still House Plants, Fake Fruit, Sea Lemon, and Night Tapes. Plus there’s plenty of local Chicago love with songs from Friko, Brigitte Calls Me Baby, Hannah Frances, Finom, Dehd, and Beach Bunny. You can hear this list of songs via the Spotify playlist at the bottom of this post. I’ll be posting a YouTube version of this playlist as well in the next few days. Of note, the song from Cindy Lee listed below is unavailable on Spotify at the moment, which is why that playlist isn’t complete. I’ll add it back should Cindy Lee allow Spotify to stream it again. Please enjoy, listen on shuffle if you’re so inclined, and share your personal favorite songs with me on social media!

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