Sunday, 22 December 2024

Top 20 Albums of 2024 - Part 3: 10 - 6

10. Better Lovers - Highly Irresponsible (Hardcore Punk)

Often a so-called supergroup is much less than the sum of it's parts. Thankfully, that's not the case with Better Lovers. Featuring former members of Every Time I Die and Dillinger Escape Plan (and a current member of Fit For An Autopsy), the band's debut album is everything you could wish for, and much more. Every song delivers a punch and has a melody that gets into your head, with Greg's impeccable vocals stealing the show. The production is crisp and clear, wchich just helps to underscore the talent involved. Fans of DEP or ETID will be overjoyed by this.

Recommended track: Your Misplaced Self

9. Linkin Park - From Zero (Alt / Nu-Metal)

At the risk of coming across as being deliberately contrary, I can honestly say that I never rated Linkin Park. While there have been songs that I've liked (One Step Closer, Papercut, Numb, War), I could never really get on board with Chester Bennington's voice. By comparison, new co-vocalist Emily Armstrong has a serious set of pipes on her, with a charm and swagger to match. Since she was announced as they new singer, I have seen some (mainly misogynistic) backlash and whining online, but hey, there will always be crybabies and trolls out there. While it falls slighly short of being essential listening, Linkin Park hasn't sounded this vital or hungry since it's debut, way back in 2000.

Recommended track(s): Twom-Faced, Heavy is the Crown, The Emptiness Machine

8. Ministry - Hopiumforthemasses (Industrial / Metal)

After a career spanning over 40 years, what is there left to say about Ministry? If you are a fan of the band, then you already know what Hopiumforthemasses sounds like. That may sound like faint praise, but it isn't. Ever with his finger on the political pulse, main man and band leader Al Jourgensen tackles up to date subjects such as climate protest (Just Stop Oil), the MAGA mob (Goddamn White Trash) and toxic masculinity (B.D.E.) with aplomb and with his trademark cynicism. While Ministry have been relatively consistent for the last 30 years, it's been quite some time since they sounded THIS good. Recommended track: Goddamn White Trash

7. Thermality - The Final Hours (Melodic Death Metal)

Do you like classic late 90s / early 2000s Gothenburg Melodic Death Metal? Of course you do. Well, this bunch of young upstarts could just be the your new favourite band. They might not stray too far from the tried and tested formula of their idols (In Flames, Dark Tranquillity, et al), but they have the talent and the passion of youth to make their music sound fresh and contemporary. 2024 has been a strong year for Melodic Death Metal and Thermality can more than hold their own with the best of them.

Recommended track: Thorns of Salem

6. Unto Others - Never, Neverland (Goth / Metal)


Unto Others have been on my radar since they released their debut album, Mana in 2019 (under the moniker Idle Hands) and I have been championing them ever since. The band combines 80s Goth Rock and classic heavy metal to create a unique style of their own, while at the same time managing to sound comfortingly familiar. That's quite some feat.

Recommended tracks: Butterfly, Fame, Suicide Today.

Monday, 9 December 2024

Top 20 Albums of 2024 - Part 2: 15 - 11

15. Zeal & Ardor - Greif

Swiss prodigy Manuel Gagneux has gone from strength to strength with his (ostensibly) one-man project, Zeal & Ardor, since it's inception in 2013. With each successive album, the band has moved progressively further away from the Black Metal meets Gospel / "Slave music" roots of it's debut to the avant-garde act it is today. Each song is so stylistically unique that it's close to impossible to describe this album in a few lines. This is an overview rather than a review, so I'll let the music speak for itself.

Recommended track(s): Hide in Shade, Sugarcoat, Thrill.

14. Korpiklaani - Rankarumppu (Folk Metal)

For most of you, I imagine that Korpiklaani need absolutely no introduction. Having been mainstays on the Folk Metal scene for more than two decades, they have more than earned their status as scene legends. I'm usually fully supportive and engaged when a band pushes it's boundaries and experiments with it's established sound, but for the sake of complete transaprency I have to admit that I have struggled to bond with Korpiklaani for the last couple of albums. Rankarumppu finds them back on the form of their early releases, albeit with a hint of the experimental edge of the last decade. The result is a potent and vibrant combination of old and new. Korpiklaani are back where they belong at the top of the Folk Metal tree.

Recommended track(s): Aita, Saunaan.

13. South of Salem - Death of the Party (Goth / Sleaze Metal)

On this, their sophomore record, Bournmouth rockers South of Salem take the Sleaze Metal meets Punk of their debut and infuse it with a Goth sensibilty. From start to finish, Death of the Party is an all-out aural orgy of melodic riffs, infectious hooks and stadium-worthy choruses. This is good old-fashioned, good time hard rock, albeit with a dark edge. Turn it up to 11 and go along for the ride.

Recommended track(s): A life Worth Dying For, Vultures, Left for Dead

12. Earthtone9 - In Resonance Nexus (Alt Metal)

Earthtone9 have been mainstays on the British Metal scene since 1998 (albeit with a six year break between 2002 - 2008) releasing three brilliant and critically acclaimed albums between 1998 and 2000. In Resonance Nexus is only the second album the band has released since their comeback in 2008 (following on from 2013's IV), but yet again, it finds the band on impeccable form. From the opening salvo of The Polyphony of Animals, it is clear that this is a band revitalised. Karl Middleton's voice retains it's distinct roar / soaring power, the choruses are as luscious and memorable as ever and the riffs as deliciously dischordant. Long time fans will be delighted and newcomers to the band will have a top-tier back catalogue to discover. Just don't leave it another 11 years, guys.

Recommended track(s): The Polyphony of Animals, Oceanic Drift

11. Apocryphal - Facing the End (Melodic / Progressive Death Metal)

Coming a mere 25 years after it's predecessor, Apocryphal's second album is an absolute triumph. I wasn't aware of the band before, so had no pre-concieved expectations about this record. Well, what an album! This is top level Melodic Death Metal with a real flair for the progressive side of things. Admittedly, I may have buried the lead here, as the standout element of this album, the thing that really elevates it, is the vocals. And said vocals are provided by none other than Melodic Death royalty, Björn "Speed" Strid (Soilwork, Act of Denial, Coldseed, etc). That said, I only realised that after I had already fallen in love with this album. The songs speak for themselves and Björn's involvement (as a session band member) is just the icing on the cake.

Recommended track(s): All is Empty, My Hero Inside