With Something Good, the arts and culture newsletter from The Conversation, we aim to cut through the noise and recommend the very best in new releases every fortnight. And what a soundtrack this year’s newsletters have had. From Lily Allen’s devastating breakup album West End Girl to Rosalía’s genre-defying LUX, these are the best albums of 2025 according to our academic experts.
1. Teal Dreams by Yazmin Lacey
Yazmin Lacey’s second album, Teal Dreams, builds on her well-received multi-genre debut, Voice Notes (2023). Featuring a more confident and developed sound, this album is a rich blending of roots and soul. The Londoner’s vocal delivery spans a range of emotional registers, exploring themes of growth and renewal throughout.
There are beautiful, melodic moments aplenty. From the slow-burn build of Grace to the sassy swagger of Crutch, all reward repeated listening.
On Ribbons, Lacey addresses personal loss, expressing feelings of change and longing, declaring she’s “not the same Yazmin”, “misses your big ideas” and wants “to talk about love and fear”.
Meanwhile her 2024 collaboration with Ezra Collective, God Gave Me Feet For Dancing, continues with the grooviness of Ain’t I Good For You. The song and album serve as an open invitation to dive in and enjoy the reflective beauty Lacey offers.
Hussein Boon is chair of the Black Music Research Unit
2. The Dreaming Prince in Ecstasy by Lamp of Murmuur
The Dreaming Prince in Ecstasy is one of 2025’s most striking extreme-metal releases. Not just because it blends black metal with psychedelic tones reminiscent of David Bowie, but because it plays with the genre’s emotional architecture in unusually vulnerable ways.
Under the swirling tremolo and gothic theatrics sits an affective register closer to yearning than nihilism. The album leans into a kind of decadent, romantic masculinity, accentuated by the complete anonymity of the band’s members, and refusal to confirm to normative maleness in the genre.
For researchers like me who study men and masculinities, it’s a compelling artifact: a reminder that subcultural performance is never just noise, but a way of working through desire, fantasy and the uneasy labour of feeling.
In a music scene often caricatured as hostile or hypermasculine, The Dreaming Prince in Ecstasy offers a glimpse of what happens when intensity becomes a mode of introspection rather than domination.
Chris Waugh is a lecturer in Criminology & Sociology
3. LUX by Rosalía
For anyone unfamiliar with Rosalía’s journey from flamenco experimentalist to global pop innovator, LUX might seem like a bold leap – yet its seeds were always there. A heartfelt offering of avant-garde classical pop, sung across 13 languages, this record feels both operatic and immediate, expansive yet relatable.
What’s most impressive is the album’s sheer conceptual depth, weaving together romance, divinity and gender without ever feeling academic or inaccessible. Drawing on historic figures such as the German Benedictine abbess and philosopher Hildegard von Bingen (1089-1179) and Taoist master Sun Bu’er (1119-1182), the record situates contemporary pop within a lineage of female mysticism and intellectual devotion. Yet songs like La Perla bring the album back to earth with cutting lyricism that feels instantly resonant.
It’s rare to hear pop music this conceptually daring become such a commercial and critical force, but this success feels wholly earned.
Eva Dieteren is a PhD researcher in gender and popular music
Read more: Rosalía’s LUX: why the 'pop-versus-classical' question misses the point
4. The End by Junior Brother
From the dual tin whistle strains of Welcome To My Mountain, the opening song from Junior Brother’s startling third album The End, you quickly realise that this is a greeting of a different kind.
With material drawing inspiration from the folklore collection of University College Dublin, the listener is led through vaguely familiar, not easily identifiable musical landscapes. The songs, often folky and traditional, are skewed with unexpected off-kilter time signatures and discordance. These elements coalesce with the unique and inimitable voice of Ronan Kealy, Junior Brother himself.
There are musical references; a touch of Richard Thompson here, a flash of Kate Bush there, but Kealy is more closely aligned with the singular songwriting styles of John Spillane, Jinx Lennon, Lisa O’ Neill and Seamus Fogarty.
This is an astonishing record. It demands the attention of the listener, and rewards with each repeated listen.
Stephen Ryan is course director for the MA in songwriting
5. Rainy Sunday Afternoon by The Divine Comedy
The Divine Comedy’s mastermind Neil Hannon brings his unique blend of upbeat poppy tunes and romantic melancholia to the band’s 13th studio album, Rainy Sunday Afternoon. And it reminds us that he really is one of the great songwriters, with a range so impressive that he can turn effortlessly from the achingly beautiful (Achilles and I Want You) to scathing, witty satire (Mar-a-Lago by the Sea) via the sparkling Christmas song All the Pretty Lights.
No, Hannon may never again see the commercial heights of National Express, a song The Guardian describes as his “worst song and greatest hit”, and nor may he wish to. After three decades in the business, Hannon is doing something much more valuable: writing emotive, catchy songs which continue to connect with people.
Glenn Fosbraey is an associate dean of humanities and social sciences
6. You Are Safe From God Here by The Acacia Strain
With the 13th album of their career, The Acacia Strain have released one of their most dense and uncompromising records to date. You Are Safe From God Here combines riff and drum brutality and crushing lyrical passages.
Most of the tracks are around two minutes long, giving the album a relentless, all-killer-no-filler directness. This is then contrasted by the colossal closing song Eucharis II: Blood Loss, which spans 14 minutes. It’s a hypnotic and bleak descent and unforgettable album closer.
Lyrically, the album dives into themes of isolation, depression and a “dark fantasy” of visions of an uncaring and predatory god. The album performance feels venomous and emotionally exposed – channelling both rage and despair. The result is an album that is not only sonically devastating but also emotionally overwhelming.
While less accessible to its predecessors, You Are Safe From God Here is more atmospheric and brutal. A harrowing, standout chapter in The Acacia Strain’s evolution as a band and rightly a top contender for album of the year in the metal scene. Ultimately, the album lives up to its name: in the depths that The Acacia Strain explore on this record, you really are safe from god.
Douglas Schulz is a lecturer in sociology and criminology
7. West End Girl by Lily Allen
Lily Allen returned to making music after seven years in October – and redefined the breakup album in the process. Written and recorded over just ten days, West End Girl is a concept album that fictionalises Allen’s journey from her casting in the play 2:22 – A Ghost Story, through to her eventual break up with her ex-husband, American actor David Harbour.
Lyrical rawness is the essence of this album, with Allen refusing to hold anything back in articulating her feelings towards an ex and their alleged secret lover, referred to on the album as “Madeline”. In this fictionalisation of events Allen calls the ex a sex addict and shares her discomfort with his alleged request for an open relationship with brutal honesty.
Musically Allen reasserts herself, reminding us of her influence on younger artists such as PinkPantheress and Charli XCX through her vocal and musical delivery, and by packing her lyrics full of contemporary and relatable cultural references.
Samuel Murray is a lecturer in music management
Read more: Seven albums to listen to during a breakup – from Lily Allen to Marvin Gaye
8. Fancy That by PinkPantheress
In the space of four years, PinkPantheress has gone from producing songs on GarageBand in her university halls of residence to an award-winning international artist. Not bad for a 24-year-old from Bath who became a viral TikTok sensation after posting faceless snippets of her songs.
Her latest album, Fancy That is ridiculously brief, but filled with bubble gum earworms and sweetly sung bops. PinkPantheress’s breathy falsetto combines with her lullaby lyrics about gen-Z life to showcase her as an extremely gifted songwriter and producer. More disco babe than Brat, Fancy That is the soundtrack to a party where everyone is invited.
Like Jim Legxacy’s mixtape Black British Music (also released this year), there is a sense of anemoia – a yearning for a time that you did not experience – that comes with Fancy That. The deep rolling 80s electronic bass of Stateside. The electronic chords of Illegal. The rave-like Girl Like Me. This trademark gen-Z hybridity should produce a sound that is cacophonic; however, the genres of drum and bass, house, garage, jungle and electronic pop coalesce to produce something that sounds fresh and new.
Julia Toppin is a senior lecturer in music enterprise and entrepreneurship
9. Let God Sort Em Out by Clipse (July)
Advances in music technology have allowed artists such as Billie Eilish and Lil Nas X to create huge hits outside of conventional studios, using DIY home recording set-ups. But Clipse’s new album — the first in 16 years from brothers Gene “Malice” and Terrence “Pusha T” Thornton — must be the first to be recorded within the headquarters of a fashion mega-brand.
Producer Pharrell Williams oversaw Let God Sort Em Out while serving as Louis Vuitton’s creative director, using a custom-built studio in their Paris headquarters. The luxurious setting seems to influence the sound: the hard-hitting percussive edge of earlier Clipse recordings gives way to woozier, synth-laden beats, exemplified by the hypnotically off-kilter P.O.V.
Clipse are pioneers of “coke rap”, and there are still plenty of bars here that engagingly recount their triumphs and near-misses in the drug trade. Now in their 50s, though, their lyrics also explore broader themes: The Birds Don’t Sing honours their recently deceased parents, while closing track By The Grace of God reflects on the improbable longevity of their careers.
Ellis Jones is a lecturer in music and management
10. Non Fiction: Piano Concerto in Four Movements by Hania Rani
Polish neo-minimalist composer and singer Hania Rani has collaborated with the Manchester Collective and improvisers Valentina Magaletti and Jack Wyllie to record her most ambitious work yet, Non Fiction.
The album was inspired by the work of Jewish child prodigy Josimah Feldschuh. Feldschuh made her concert debut in the Warsaw Ghetto just before the second world war at the age of 11. There, she also began to write her own music. She died of tuberculosis just outside of Warsaw at the age of 13, having fled the ghetto with her family. Only 17 of Feldschuh’s compositions survived.
Inspired, Rani set about writing and recording Non Fiction. However, the project’s focus was soon unsettled by more recent horrors: Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, and Israel’s invasion of Gaza after the October 7 attacks. Rani perceived similarities between images of Gaza’s destruction shared online, and photographs of Warsaw’s destruction during the second world war.
The result is an instrumental album of scope and depth. Non Fiction stands as a reflection on war and brutality that allows just enough grace, tenderness and humanity to keep us hopeful.
Andrew Green is a lecturer in the anthropology of music
What was your favourite album of 2025? Let us know in the comments below.
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Samuel Murray is affiliated with the Musicians' Union and a writer member of PRS for Music.
Andrew J. Green, Chris Waugh, Douglas Schulz, Ellis Jones, Eva Dieteren, Glenn Fosbraey, Hussein Boon, Julia Toppin, and Stephen Ryan do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.