Top 10 Albums From Each Of The Last 10 Years
We have a feeling this will be a divisive one... Feel free to comment below. What do you agree / disagree with? What would yours be…?
2024
Green Day - Saviors
Opeth - The Last Will and Testament
Twenty One Pilots - Clancy
Bring Me The Horizon - POST HUMAN: NeX GEn
Feeder - Black / Red
The Smile - Wall of Eyes (and Cutouts)
Linkin Park - From Zero
Blood Incantation - Absolute Elsewhere
Gatecreeper - Dark Superstition
The Last Dinner Party - Prelude To Ecstacy
2024 was a fantastic year for rock, metal and punk, with several other acts (The Offspring, Marilyn Manson, Nightwish, Mad Caddies, Rotting Christ, Judas Priest, Many Eyes, Better Lovers, Alkaline Trio and Sum 41, to name but a few) who could easily have made it into the top 10. There has been something of an indie revival brewing too, with strong albums from Cast, Shed Seven, Razorlight and The Cure throughout 2024). In our opinion, Green Day came out narrowly on top, by producing their best album in 20 years, which has the timelessness of American Idiot and Dookie.
2023
Code Orange - The Above
Metallica - 72 Seasons
Paramore - This Is Why
In Flames - Foregone
Blink 182 - One More Time
Foo Fighters - But Here We Are
Rancid - Tomorrow Never Comes
Orbit Culture - Descent
Ash - Race The Night
Hundred Reasons - Glorious Sunset
2023’s top albums came mostly from acts with an extensive, long-established pedigree, who each produced their best album in years, in some cases bouncing back from devastating loss (Foo Fighters) and in other cases resulting from reconciliation (Blink 182 and Hundred Reasons). Of the newer acts, Orbit Culture are establishing themselves as ones to watch; and Code Orange took a further step up from Underneath and Forever, expanding their brutal assualt into 90s alt-rock territory. ‘The Above’ gets better and better with every listen.
2022
Machine Head - Of Kingdom And Crown
The Mars Volta - The Mars Volta
Feeder - Torpedo
Parkway Drive - Darker Still
The 1975 - Being Funny In A Foreign Language
Daniel Johns - FutureNever
Rammstein - Zeit
Coheed & Cambria - Vaxis II: A Window of the Waking Mind
Lorna Shore - Pain Remains
The Weeknd - Dawn FM
Everyone thought that Machine Head were dead and buried after half the band walked out overnight - but Robb Flynn had other ides. The new line-up may be more ‘Robb, Jared and friends’ now, but ‘Of Kingdom and Crown’ was CRUSHING. What a masterpiece. Alongside this, The Mars Volta reformed after 10 years, Daniel Johns came back from the wilderness with an eclectic 2nd solo album, Lorna Shore proved that brutal can also be beautiful, and The Weeknd produced a bona-fide concept album. What a year!
2021
Weezer - OK Human
Cradle of Filth - Existence Is Futile
Spiritbox - Eternal Blue
Bullet For My Valentine - Bullet For My Valentine
Twenty One Pilots - Scaled & Icy
Turnstile - Glow On
Architects - For Those That Wish To Exist
Carcass - Torn Arteries
Royal Blood - Typhoons
Biffy Clyro - The Myth Of The Happily Ever After
Rivers Cuomo is an incredibly prolific songwriter. Not only did Weezer produce the Beatles-influenced masterpiece ‘OK Human’, but also the 80s hair metal-worshipping ‘Van Weezer’. Elsewhere, Spiritbox released a barnstorming debut full-length, BFMV came back heavier than ever, and Turnstile made the perfect hybrid of punk, hardcore, RnB and pop. 2021 was also the year of incredible live streams, in the absence of touring. Check out Biffy Clyro, Architects, Twenty One Pilots and Weezer all making incredible presentations of their latest albums.
2020
Lamb of God - Lamb of God
Nightwish - Human :II: Nature
Pure Reason Revolution - Eupnea
Moron Police - A Boat On The Sea
Trivium - What The Dead Men Say
Biffy Clyro - A Celebration Of Endings
Less Than Jake - Silver Linings
HAIM - Women In Music
Taylor Swift - Folklore
Vader - Solitude In Madness
Chris Adler has such a unique drumming style, that when he left Lamb of God it could easily have led to the demise of the band. No-one expected them to bounce back so well, and their self-titled 2020 record, with new sticksman Art Cruz, released during the height of Covid, was easily as strong as ‘Ashes of the Wake’ and ‘Sacrament’. Speaking of new members, Less Than Jake also produced their first album with a new drummer; and Nightwish proved that Floor Jansen was here to stay as their 3rd (and hopefully final) singer, with the masterful follow-up to 2015’s ‘Endless Forms Most Beautiful’.
2019
Tool - Fear Inoculum
Slipknot - We Are Not Your Kind
Korn - The Nothing
The Interrupters - Fight The Good Fight
Cattle Decapitation - Death Atlas
Volbeat - Rewind, Replay, Rebound
Bad Religion - Age Of Unreason
Billie Eilish - When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?
Amon Amarth - Berserker
The Cat Empire - Stolen Diamonds
A lot has been made of the gap between ‘10,000 Days’ and ‘Fear Inoculum’, and people often forget that we had plenty from Puscifer and A Perfect Circle to give us our Maynard fix in the interim. But there is something about the combination of Danny Carey, Justin Chancellor, Adam Jones and Maynard James Keenan that no other band can achieve, and none of the members can do by themselves. ‘Fear Inoculum’ may have sounded underwhelming on first listen, but it gets better every time, and its 6 ‘main’ songs have all blossomed into some of Tool’s best live tracks. 2019 was a hell of a year for music. Korn and Slipknot could both have taken the number 1 spot if it wasn’t for Tool’s return.
2018
Muse - Simulation Theory
A Perfect Circle - Eat The Elephant
Ghost - Prequelle
Alice In Chains - Rainier Fog
Parkway Drive - Reverance
Superorganism - Superorganism
Pennywise - Never Gonna Die
Soulfly - Ritual
Burn The Priest (Lamb of God) - Legion XX
Alkaline Trio - Is This Thing Cursed?
Inspired by the huge success of Stranger Things, Muse fully embraced their love for 80s Sci-Fi in ‘Simulation Theory’, bouncing back from the messy ‘Drones’. Not only was the concept fantastic, but it was matched perfectly by the synth-heavy sound, and from top to bottom it was their strongest album since 2006’s ‘Black Holes and Revelations’. Elsewhere, Parkway Drive found the ideal blend of melody and brute force on ‘Reverance’; a group of multi-cultural housemates from London formed ‘Superorganism’ and made percussion out of cruching apples (seriously); and A Perfect Circle released their first album in over 10 years, with a more piano-driven sound.
2017
Trivium - The Sin And The Sentence
Mastodon - Emperor Of Sand
Sikth - The Future In Whose Eyes?
Weezer - Pacific Daydream
Primus - The Desaturating Seven
Lorde - Melodrama
Power Trip - Nightmare Logic
Queens Of The Stone Age - Villains
Royal Blood - How Did We Get So Dark?
At The Drive-In - in.ter a.li.a
Trivium’s revolving drumstool led to some patchy albums in 2013’s ‘Vengeance Falls’ and 2015’s ‘Silence in the Snow’. Recruiting new drummer Alex Bent was the best move they could have made, as he is an absolute BEAST behind the kit. ‘The Sin And The Sentence’ is a masterclass of modern metal and earns Trivium the accolade of best album of 2017. On reflection, 2017 was a curious year for rock music. Primus turned the weirdness dial up to 11 with a concept album about seven goblins who remove colour from the world. QOTSA worked with pop uber-producer Mark Ronson. And Power Trip brought the reverb-drenched vocal sound of the 80s back to thrash metal with ‘Nightmare Logic’.
2016
The Cat Empire - Rising With The Sun
Metallica - Hardwired…To Self Destruct
Weezer - The White Album
Jimmy Eat World - Integrity Blues
Opeth - Sorceress
The Dillinger Escape Plan - Dissociation
Meshuggah - The Violent Sleep Of Reason
Babymetal - Metal Resistance
Gojira - Magma
My Vitriol - The Secret Sessions
Australia’s The Cat Empire are an incredibly fun live band, with a range of world music influences and endless improvisation to add to their rock / ska / funk / soul / pop sound. It hadn’t translated fully into the studio until ‘Rising With The Sun’, which has absolute belters in ‘Daggers Drawn’, ‘Bulls’, ‘Wolves’ and ‘Bataclan’, the latter of which was a joyous call for unity following the tragic shooting at the Eagles of Death Metal show in Paris the year before. 2016 was a year of some bands (Babymetal, Gojira and Meshuggah) really coming into their prime, while it was sadly the end of pioneers The Dillinger Escape Plan, who went out on a high with 'Dissociation’.
2015
Ghost - Meliora
Cradle Of Filth - Hammer Of The Witches
Marilyn Manson - The Pale Emperor
Good Riddance - Peace In Our Time
Daniel Johns - Talk
Bring Me The Horizon - That’s The Spirit
Best Coast - California Nights
Tame Impala - Currents
Parkway Drive - Ire
Halestorm - Into The Wild Life
After two promising albums and an EP, Ghost finally realised their potential on ‘Meliora’, a record of sheer class - not to mention a Grammy nomination for ‘Cirice’, which also attracted the attention of James Hetfield who then invited Ghost to open for Metallica a couple of years later. Elsewhere, Cradle of Filth returned re-energised and rejuvinated with a new line-up, producing their best album in years; Tame Impala embraced 80s synth-pop to excellent effect; and Daniel Johns broke his post-Silverchair silence with a superb debut solo album, showing his soul and R’n’B influences.