10 New Releases You Need to Hear Right Now [October 2024]
More amazing music than the average person can shake a stick at!
Hello! đđ
Welcome to another installment of the new release rundown column I typically share monthly as part of the Best Music of All Time newsletter.
This post showcases some recent releases Iâve had in heavy rotation recently (i.e., albums that have dropped in the past few monthsâsome of them take a second or two for me to get to). One or several of these records will definitely be on my longlist for the âbest of the yearâ compilation Iâll drop before the holidays.
If you want to catch up on other recent releases, I recommend checking out other blogs with the same tag. There wonât be a November 2024 edition of this column as I prepare for end-of-year content, but thereâs more than enough here to keep your streamer busy until then.
Finally, please hit that subscribe button if youâre enjoying this newsletter and want to expand its reach. Everything I post is totally free, and sharing it with your network is the best way to support this work.
Letâs go:
1. âKing of the Mischievous South Vol. 2â by Denzel Curry
Genre: Hip-Hop, Gangsta Rap
Label: Loma Vista
Release Date: July 19, 2024
Vibe: đ¤
As Denzel Curry projects go, King of the Mischievous South Vol. 2 isnât his best, nor is it his most emotionally vulnerable release in the vein of Melt My Eyez See Your Future. However, what I can say is that itâs his most back-to-basics collection of tracks in a while and, by that measure, delivers a strong spiritual sequel to the first volume in this mixtape series, which dropped in 2012.
The allusions to Curryâs Southern roots are plentiful on Vol. 2. Aside from guest spots from respected spitters like Juicy J, the production winds the clocks back to a certain strain of distorted, horrorcore rap that he initially made his name with. âSkedâ and âBlack Flag Freestyleâ are two highlights that stand above the rest, giving vibes akin to Three 6 Mafiaâs heyday.
2. âAcross the Tracksâ by Boldy James & Conductor Williams
Genre: Hip-Hop, Alternative
Label: Near Mint
Release Date: June 28, 2024
Vibe: đť
Boldy James is one of my favorite emcees working today, partly because of how subtly heâs able to deliver emotional gut punches. His latest effort, Across the Tracks, sees him teaming with Missouri native Conductor Williams for an LP thatâs as conflicted as it is brooding and as precise as it is calm, cool, and collected.
Jamesâ writing and delivery shouldnât be dismissed as shallow despite his laid-back flow. It just wonât hit you over the head with its message, but if you meet him on his level, the musicâs power is undeniable. Consider a moment on âFlying Trapeze Act,â where James encapsulates how it feels to have avoided a worse fate: âUsed to feel trapped in the ghetto, tryna to break free/On a 30-year run, I feel like an escapee.â Heâs truthful, nostalgic, and refuses to take anything for granted.
3. âBig for Youâ by Zsela
Genre: Art-Pop, Singer/Songwriter
Label: Mexican Summer
Release Date: June 14, 2024
Vibe: đ
As I revealed in my essay about Sadeâs Diamond Life, Iâm a sucker for soulful, sexy contraltos. If youâre like me and a fan of intricate, intimate R&B, youâll dig Big for You, the full-length debut from Brooklyn-based Zsela. Her voice, an utterly hypnotic instrument that does mysterious as well as it does seductive, pulls you in the way a newfound crush might in a crowded room. I hung on every word.
This debut LP doesnât mean that Zsela is an industry newbie, either. She cut her teeth working with performers like Caroline Polachek and Arooj Aftab, with the latterâs Night Reign, released earlier in 2024, making for an exceptional companion piece with this record. As an artistic statement, Big For You signals the arrival of a noteworthy presence in pop and neo-soul.
4. âSentimentâ by Claire Rousay
Genre: Singer-Songwriter, Experimental
Label: Thrill Jockey
Release Date: April 19, 2024
Vibe: đĽ˛
Is ambient emo a thing yet? If not, itâs now a term Iâve coined to describe the latest album from Claire Rousay, Sentiment. In a brisk 37 minutes, the singer/songwriter establishes herself as an artist cut from the isolated, always-online cloth of the times we live in. Itâs intensely vulnerable in its confessional approach to music-making, which translates to a raw but frequently dazzling listening experience.
My favorite aspect of this record is one Iâve highlighted in other albums recently, which is the inclusion of found sound mosaics. Here, it lends so much texture and immediacy to Rousayâs songs to the point that I wanted more of it. Of course, there has to be a sonic balance somewhere, but by grounding the compositions in snippets from her reality, the themes become far more personal.
5. â#gigiâ by Skaiwater
Genre: Hip-Hop, Alternative
Label: Capitol
Release Date: June 14, 2024
Vibe: đľâđŤ
On first listen, #gigi sounded all over the place. Dipping its toes in everything from autotune-heavy R&B, Jersey club, neo-soul, and Latin funk, LA-based rapper/producer Skaiwater throws a lot of musical ideas out there, almost like an eclectic tasting menu for an unsuspecting dinner guest. But the more I played this LP, the more it broke down my (admittedly cynical) defenses.
At the core of this impressively diverse and delectably distorted collection of tracks is a classic soulfulness youâd associate more with the gold standards of the 70s or 80s. Cuts like âRunâ and âRainâ couldâve turned heads in previous R&B eras, while the more overtly electronic songs are just as compelling. Overall, this record has sneakily become one of my favorites from this year.
6. âHeisâ by Rema
Genre: Afrobeat, Amapiano
Label: Anti
Release Date: July 11, 2024
Vibe: đĽ˛
I saw Rema at the Afro Nation festival in Miami in 2023, right as âCome Downâ was cresting as one of the yearâs biggest singles. At that point, he sounded like he was primed to take the next step as a global emblem of Afro-fusion success. But, with Heis, the Nigerian star raises his game with an LP that feels fresh, adventurous, and bolder than his previous album.
Full of feel-good club tracks, this release is the epitome of all killer, no filler. With standouts like âYayoâ and âOzeba,â it also purposely distances itself from other leading voices in the genre like Asake and Fireboy DML, who were preoccupied with manufacturing pleasant but derivative victory lap records. The only issue with this one? I wish it had gone on a bit longer.
7. âPassage Du Desirâ by Johnny Blue Skies & Sturgill Simpson
Genre: Alternative, Country, Soft Rock
Label: High Top Mountain
Release Date: July 12, 2024
Vibe: đĽ˛
It turns out you can ask complicated, possibly unanswerable questions of the universe without bogging yourself down with inescapable emotional tumult. Or, at least thatâs what Sturgill Simpson accomplishes on his latest album, Passage Du Desir, released under his Johnny Blue Skies moniker. Itâs not simply country or soft rock blissâitâs soul-searching on a cosmic plane.
Even when the record gets dark, like on âWho Am I,â Simpsonâs matter-of-fact approach sounds more like an honest dialogue than a despairing confessional. He carefully keeps the light at the end of the tunnel from fading, regardless of the subject matter. Additionally, any man who can segue from the albumâs best song to a Prince cover gets his share of bonus points.
8. âSmoke & Fictionâ by X
Genre: Alternative, Punk Rock
Label: Fat Possum
Release Date: August 2, 2024
Vibe: đ¤
Smoke & Fiction comes to us at a bittersweet point in Xâs career, following the bandâs announcement that theyâd be hanging it up after more than four decades together. If this album is indeed their swan song, itâs a worthy coda for a group thatâs had an untold amount of influence on the punk rock scene, particularly for bands coming up in the West Coast scene.
This record is also a reminder of why thereâs so much to love about punk rock that threads the needle between in-your-face ferocity and catchy, sometimes pop-leaning sensibilities. The band comes through with some memorable riffs, fabulous hooks, and, perhaps most impressively, songs with something important to say all these years later. An out-and-out instant classic.
9. âEndlessnessâ by Nala Sinephro
Genre: Jazz Fusion, Electronic, Experimental
Label: Anti
Release Date: September 6, 2024
Vibe: đ¤Š
If youâre unfamiliar with the singular jazz stylings of Nala Sinephro, youâre in for a treat. The Caribbean-Belgian experimental artist has made a name for herself as an expert melder of styles and tones, shaping the potential future direction of the genre in the process. If that sounds overblown or grandiose, just listen to Endlessness and tell me if Iâm overreacting. I doubt it.
I wonât spoil sonic specifics for you here, as this album is best experienced if you know almost nothing going into it. I will, however, mention that Sinephro literally had her hands all over every facet of the creation process. She composed each piece, performed on multiple instruments, spearheaded the recording, and even mixed the final tracks. A true virtuoso among us mortals.
10. âRitualâ by Jon Hopkins
Genre: Electronic, Ambient
Label: Anti
Release Date: August 30, 2024
Vibe: đ
Letâs cap this post off with a known name returning with another tour de force: Jon Hopkins. The electronic mastermindâs latest is a work of complexity and grandeur, rising to dizzying heights and plunging to incredible depths, expanding and folding in on itself all at once. But, like his other work, thereâs an intimacy and stillness in his work, too, that lends focus and clarity.
Split into eight different movements, Ritual works best if you play it all the way through without interruption, letting each symphonic twist wash over you like a tidal wave. Unlike other ambient records that have made it into this column, Hopkins isnât content to tease you with a pleasant background aesthetic. This is muscular, purposeful ambient experimentation as pure art.
Did any of these recent releases make it into your rotation? What new music have I missed that I should check out? Sound off in the comments.
Iâve always been a fan of X. My Love began with Wild Gift so thanks for the heads up on their new release. Alphabetland from 2020 is a great one! The new Sturgill Simpson sounds good. I saw Simpson and his band at Hinterland Festival maybe 5 years ago. The band was minus itâs keyboard player (he âcalled inâ sick that night) for a momentous performance. A power trio as good as CreamâŚ.yes I said as good as Cream!
Digging the new Sturgill. Nala will be cued up for an after-gummy candlelight evening!