As the years go by and I've been doing this list for some, oh, I don't know, decade and a half or whatever, it seems to me that each list may be increasingly influenced by where I am in my life - which is to say more accurately, what do I feel like hearing? Which is to say, this comes with an admission: the list that follows may simply be my personal best albums list. Okay, let me not insult you - it's obvious that this is my list, my name is on the damn thing. What I mean is that this may be MY list - it may not be the best albums if we're judging on technical prowess or compositional acuity. It may be simply a list of albums that I enjoyed the most this year. And so be it.
Okay, a brief review of the rules:
- Must be an original studio composition in 2024
- No re-releases
- No Greatest Hits or compilations of any kind
- No live albums
Without further preamble -
HONORABLE MENTION – While She Sleeps – Self Hell
I, for one, wasn’t sure rap metal would ever make a comeback. Nor was I really sure that it should. And maybe it still hasn’t. But there’s a couple artists this year that tried to put a toe back in that formerly pristine but now dirtied and forgotten pool. While She Sleeps was one of them. (Quick shout-out to Ihsahn’s self-titled album for narrowly missing out here.)
EP OF THE YEAR: Alestorm – Voyage of the Dead Marauder EP
You know how some people are ‘small doses’ people? I think Alestorm is a ‘small doses’ band for me. And this was the perfect dose. As ever with Alestorm, the comedy is acerbic and not for the faint of heart, but that does nothing to reduce its hilarity. And the title track? As legit a song as you can imagine.
11 – Reliqa – Secrets of the Future
Not all that dissimilar from While She Sleeps in concept, but this is the better execution. The band is tight and in control and they know the sound they’re going for, even as it crosses several aesthetic and sonic boundaries.
10 – Black Note Graffiti – Resist the Divide
Not a single song over 3:45, and punctuated by short, minimalist riffs. There’s something about the mechanics of this album that’s kind of hypnotic. Think Static-X, but dial way back on the gain and slow the tempo down to half speed. But it’s similar in that the constructions are sparse, and I mean that as a compliment. You can hear every part being played clearly, and no song overstays its welcome. A better comparison – like a slightly less-screamy, more deliberate Hellfreaks.
9 – Dungeon Crawl – Maze Controller
I kinda hate how much I like this album, because it is so unapologetically nerdy and based around late nights mainlining caffeine while you watch your graph-paper hero lose hit points because of a bad luck dice roll. (And yes, I hate it because I’ve been there.) When you strip that way, thought, there’s a really good, authentic thrash album underneath, and as I look back, I seem to have a place for that on my list every year (last year was Hellevate’s “The Purpose Is Cruelty” EP.) The guitar work here is fun, the lyrics are appropriately absurd, the whole thing just feels right.
8 – Sundrifter – An Earlier Time
After Sundrifter released the very good “Visitations” back in whatever-the-hell year it was, I remember thinking to myself “damn, if those guys could just focus this a little and keep it within the margins, they’d really make something great.” Well, now we have “An Earlier Time,” and it’s exactly the apex of Sundrifter could and should be. It’s all the same cosmic wanderings of a wayward probe, but it’s snappier, more confident, and all around more listenable, while losing none of the signature fuzzy guitar tone.
7 – Dampf – No Angels Alive
Third year in a row. Third year in a row that some electronic artist cracks my year end album list, by crossing over and blurring the line into metal. Now, I’m giving myself a little grace here, because this is the second time that the artist has been Dampf, which means this is more than just a coincidence. Dampf may not write the most technically challenging metal, but there is no question that there’s an understanding of what goes into composing a catchy hit. There’s something about these songs that hooks you immediately.
6 – Powerwolf – Wake Up the Wicked
Color me a little surprised. I’ve long been a Powerwolf partisan, but I freely admit that the band had a long run of making a great album followed by a mediocre one. So imagine my shock when this album comes out comparatively on the heels of last year's “Interludium,” and still bangs with a new bunch of massive songs that only Powerwolf could have written.
5 – Powerman 5000 – Abandon Ship
Am I the only person in the world who has this as a top five album from 2024? Probably. And is some of that no doubt because of my personal nostalgia? Possibly. But this is my list, so tough rocks. I’m just going to come out and say it – PM5K will never again be the band that wrote “Tonight the Stars Revolt!” That age has passed. But they also don’t have to be that band again. After however many years wandering in the desert, the comeback that seemingly began with “Builders of the Future” some ten years ago is real and tangible and authentic. And this album is a ton of fun.
4 – Dead Poet Society – Fission
One of the most unique bands going. Minimalist beats, heavy rhythms, guitar tone not heard since Soundgarden’s “4th of July”…this is a heady mix of styles and colors, and it takes a steady hand to be able to balance all of those into music that’s even listenable, let alone good. Extra props for “Hurt,” which is probably my Song of the Year…as someone who is also in a non-traditional career (yes, I have a job, and no, it’s not writing about music,) that tune hits close to home sometimes.
**It merits mention, there’s a gap here. These albums are all great, but the next three were on a level all their own in 2024.**
3 – Transit Method – Othervoid
2 – The Warning – Keep Me Fed
Ugh, I went back and forth on this a hundred and fifty times. I even complained to my compatriot Chris about it. I haven’t had this much trouble deciding between two albums for #1 since 2014, when I battled internally for a week over Red Eleven’s “Round II” and Destrage’s “Are You Kidding Me? No.” (I picked Red Eleven then, and I stand by it…about half the time.) I can’t understand why the Warning haven’t conquered the world yet. The talent, the songs, the aesthetic…this band has everything you want in a world-wide hero rock group. It must only be the fallow period for rock fandom that we find ourselves in that prevents them from ascending. Although, every time I see them, it’s in a slightly larger venue…In the meantime, this is certainly the album I spent the most time with this year, but it did ultimately fall short to…
1 – Combichrist – CMBCRST
Some years ago, Combichrist took flak from their fans for gradually moving away from a pure industrial style, incorporating more and more metal elements. I personally think it’s the best decision the band ever made, as every album since that point (perhaps beginning with the DmC soundtrack?) has been better than the previous, culminating in this masterpiece of doom, gloom and as KMFDM coined the term, the ‘ultra-heavy beat.’ Some of the best riffs of the year were recorded for this album. What puts it ahead of The Warning at #2? The Warning, for all their greatness, worked with more professional songwriters. And as Chris has so passionately explained on our very pages, there’s no sin in that, none at all. But when you’re deciding between masterpieces, that extra little degree of authenticity for Combichrist matters.
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