Best Albums of 2025 (Greg only)

It’s been a bit since Elijah & I have put together our annual Best Albums of the year list. We had a good run, starting back in 2008 and continually pretty faithfully up until a couple of years ago, when both of us must have been overwhelmed with work, life, and everything. I did find a note on my phone where I’d begun compiling a list of my Best Albums of 2023 (the usual suspects: Mitski, Tim Baker, Sufjan Stevens, Angelo de Augustine, The New Pornographers, along with some newer groups like boygenius, Caroline Rose, Nation of Language), but it never made it beyond my Notes app.

I suppose part of our reason for doing these lists was to share the joy of the listening experiences we had discovered with any readers out in the “interwebiverse” (just coined that term), as well as to somehow acknowledge and celebrate the great work that these artists had released in the year gone by. So hopefully, there are still a few folks out there who will stumble upon this & benefit from the the work put into sorting through some of the various musical endeavors that were released in 2025.

So this year I’m going solo in sharing my Best Albums, as Elijah is probably too busy providing for his dear family to pay much attention to new music (I tend to listen as I’m driving, doing dishes, and going to sleep). In the past, I typically put a lot of thought into the ranking process of 1-10, but this year, I just don’t have it in me to sort it out that carefully. Except for the NUMBER ONE album, which I will list first, then everything else will just be in alphabetical order.

Here is a link to a Spotify playlist of tracks from my 2025 Best Albums list, along with a few tracks from other works that didn’t quite make the cut (LINK)-you can use this playlist and click on the three dots to “Go to album” so that I don’t have to add links for each one on the list below. Hope that you may take up & listen, my friends! (from Greg)


  1. ROMANCE (DELUXE EDITION) – FONTAINES D.C.

Now, to the pedant, I will readily admit that the original release of this album from the Irish band Fontaines D.C. came out in 2024. But I did not hear of it that year. I just heard a song from this album a few months ago algorithmically playing on Spotify after the record I was listening to had finished, then when I looked up the album, it said it had come out in 2025.

Well, it turns out that what I was listening to was a “Deluxe Edition” that had been released, but I am counting it as a 2025 album because I want to sing the praises of this masterpiece.

The first track on Romance sounded like it could have been a track from Depeche Mode’s 1986 album Black Celebration. Lovely, but derivative. But when the next song (and every other song after that) began playing, I was entranced by all that I was hearing: the seething energy of youth, carving out their place in this modern world, along with the masterful songcraft, easily weaving through various genres and vocal styles. I was intrigued by the alternately thick and spare instrumentation, as well as singer Grian Chatten’s refusal to soften his distinctive Dublin accent into something more internationally palatable (such as when the word “hard” was delightfully pronounced as “haired”), and on and on I could sing its praises.

Song after song is a sonic and lyrical feast, engaging repeated listens with deeper appreciation and reward. I’ve since checked out this band’s back catalogue and found it to have the seeds of the genius that this album exemplifies, while the fullness of melodic and compositional dexterity displayed here had not yet been realised (though many of the track’s on Chatten’s 2023 solo album Chaos for the Fly do demonstrate a similar level of accomplishment). Truly, the only thing I do not like about this masterpiece is the cover art, which feels a bit AI-slop-ish. I anticipate great things from these lads in the days to come…I think people will still be listening to this record 100 years from now!

ALTOGTHER STRANGER – LAEL NEALE

I think it was at the beginning of 2025 that I discovered this gifted lo-fi, indie-folk singer-songwriter (an accurate but perhaps less alluring genre label for her music is “minimalist drone pop”) and I was immediately fascinated by the kind of homemade quality of her songs (many times created with the help of an “Omnichord,” which may seem a bit twee to some, but which I found particularly endearing). I was struck by her timeless lyrical prowess and the melodic purity of her vocals, particularly on her first album on the SubPop label, Acquainted with Night which I actually purchased on vinyl, an affectation I reserve for albums that I DEEPLY ADORE. Her work sounded like an amalgam of Emily Dickinson, Bob Dylan, and the band Low, and her lyrics became deeply embedded in my psyche.

Sadly, this new album did not reach the same heights as that 2021 opus, but it still rises above so much of the pap and pablum that exists in the sonicsphere these days. She is not only conveying her own experience of the world, but her lyrics seem to embody an earnestly contrarian worldview about contemporary existence, particular in an urban environment–she lived in LA for a while, so I can relate to her revulsion to the kind of life that we live in this “negatropolis”– for more of her trenchant observations on turning away from the wired-in, distraction-saturated, and additive-filled world, I’ve loved reading her Substack as well.

ANIMARU – MEI SEMONES

I feel very Gen Z with the addition of this Indie-pop/jazz album, as I discovered the artist via an Instagram reel and she looks like she is barely out of her teens, but her debut album is astonishingly great! If I had continued ranking albums on this list, Animaru would have been near the top…

To begin with, Semones is an incredible guitarist, of both a jazzy Bossa Nova sort as well as a 90’s alternative grungy ilk, and she writes her songs in complex symphonic arrangements & time signatures, sometimes reminiscent of a light South American style I associate with Brazil in the 1960’s, but she’s singing in both English and Japanese, with vocals that swing from high and sweet airy falsettos to deep and powerful alto resonances. She is obviously a prodigy of confounding levels of genius and disciplined musicianship, and yet, she also feels disarmingly tender and pensive. I can only anticipate amazing things for this artist in the future.

BLIGHT – THE ANTLERS

I’ve followed The Antlers since the release of their 2009 concept album Hopsice, which followed a doomed romance in a cancer ward (it sounds depressing, but it is actually so powerfully evocative and intimately alluring). My appreciation for their subsequent works has varied, but this new album is a return to the heights of their talent. It’s incredibly fragile at times and explosively agitated at others, as the songs seem to focus on ecological and societal ills of the modern world. Honestly, these are not themes that typically draw my attention, but this is so masterfully created, I felt the agony of what our industry and technology have done to earth and its inhabitants to a heartbreaking extent. If you’re like me and would rather ignore the effects of our mismanagement of God’s creation, I suggest you open yourselves to at least one listen of this record, to help you “consider the source” of much of our woes…

I HEARD THAT NOISE – quickly quickly

The first song I heard from this one-man band from Portland, OR was “Enything,” which immediately hooked me with it’s propulsive poppy charm and smooth double-tracked vocals, but when I purchased the full record, it was quite different from what I’d expected. A bit more on the “noise pop” end of the indie-rock genre, but I grew to enjoy the blasts of fuzz or dissonance that would disrupt the melodic guitar finger-picking or piano strokes. For those of you who know the music taste-maker Josh McBride, he gave this group his hearty approval after I put a song on his 40th birthday playlist, and that’s something.

IN LIMERANCE – JACOB ALON

This is another astonishing debut album from a younger artist (though on a major record label), this time from a “non-binary” Scottish indie-folk singer-songwriter. The sadness of this singer’s experience of confusion and violence on the basis of their identity and sexuality is made exquisitely lovely through such a delicately yearning voice (sometimes almost yelping and yodeling) and controlled instrumentation. Even if you can’t relate to the queer experience, this is a stunning work of art that deserves to be heard and appreciated. I can’t wait to hear more from them…

LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL – THE DEARS

I’ve been following The Dears, a Canadian indie-rock mainstay since the mid-2000’s (when I heard lead man Murray Lightburn had been called the “black Morrissey” I knew I had to check them out!) and while they’ve fallen off of the mainstream radar of late, I’ve always followed any of their new releases with great interest and appreciation. I’m happy to say that this new album is among their best! The band sounds just like they did at the height of their sonic powers (which I take to be their 2006 masterwork Gang of Losers, which is among my favorite albums EVER!).

Song after song is filled with such engaging tunefulness and Lightburn’s earnest lyricism, it is a joy to follow him opening his heart up and sharing all of its triumphs and sorrows with the world. His song “Dead Contacts” hit me particularly hard, thinking of folks who’ve passed away this past year and how I’ve come across their name in my phone address book recently (particularly my wife’s Aunt Eileen, who was so dearly loved by all of our family!).

patching – runo plum

Yet ANOTHER debut album from a Gen-Z indie-folk singer-songwriter! I’ve been following this artist for the last couple of years as she’s released EPs or singles, and I was particularly impressed with her collaboration with Philip Brooks on “mountain songs,” a collection which contains some tracks that I’ve listened to so many times and have put on various playlists.

Well, her debut album didn’t quite reach the level of perfection I was hoping for or anticipating, but it is still awfully good. Her voice reminds me at times of Harriet Wheeler from The Sundays (another of my all-time favorite groups), so I probably projected my desire for a more jangly acoustic sound from her (which she often hits quite nicely), but I’m just happy that she’s continuing to release her gifts into the world that needs her kind of beautiful melancholy.

The Scholars – Car Seat Headrest

I got really into these indie-rockers back in the mid-2010’s with the back-to-back releases of Teens of Style and Teens of Denial, the later of which I played on repeat for some time. I didn’t get as into some of their subsequent albums, but this new release feels (similarly to The Dears) like a return to form, though there is another sense that I’m getting which I hadn’t quite seen in them before.

That is, this feels like they’re creating a kind of “neo-Classic Rock” with the album being called a “rock opera” as if the band is picking up cues from The Who or Pink Floyd, with a number of songs exceeding the 10 minute mark, containing some of the dynamics and flourishes of a genre lost to past ages. To be honest, I didn’t quite follow the storyline of The Scholars, but I don’t think it really matters, as the songs stand quite well on their own, at least to my ears! I did pick up the CD at the new Fingerprints location in Bixby Knolls when I was there with two of my brothers, as it promised a “38-page booklet” (I think), but then when I opened the booklet up, the font size was like 2-3 point and could only be read through zooming in on my phone camera. Maybe I’m just getting old…but what the heck, CSH!

VALERIAN TEA – Magic Fig

This album is kind of the wild card on this list, but I felt like it was consistently more interesting to me than any of the albums below. Again, another debut album–no idea how old the members are, but it sounds like it was made in 1967 by some prog/psychedelic synthesis with an ethereal female lead singer singing about goblins and “Riders at Dawn.” This is not my typical fare, but something in this record just clicked with me: maybe it was the feeling of authentic musicality and creativity in an age of overproduced pop and AI. I would understand if this is not for everyone, but except for the title track, song after song, I totally dug it! Turn on, tune in, and drop out, man!


Before I transition to the albums that DIDN’T make the 10 BEST list, I did want to give a shout out to a 2002 self-titled album from Long Beach indie-rock heroes, The SeaMonsters, which was just put up on Spotify this year. I love this album so much & it takes me back to when I was playing drums (barely competently) with the genius lead singer, guitarist, & songwriter Matt Clatterbuck and demigod-level bassist Victor Orlando Nieto (who was one of my groomsmen) in the band Pal in the mid-1990’s. Some of the songs on this record began back when we were in Pal, but The SeaMonsters took them to the next level with the heap of talent that is Erick Nieto on drums (he was the one who actually taught me to play!) and they added new songs that I also cherish so dearly. I know I will listen to their music often with great joy for the rest of my life. So immeasurably talented, these guys!

OTHER 2025 ALBUMS OF MENTION

  • As Long As I Am in the Tent of This Body I Will Make a Joyful Noise – John VanDeusen: This is another worship-esque album from the incomparably talented JVD, whose 2018 album (I Am) Origami Pt. 2 – Every Power Wide Awake is among my favorites of all time (thanks to JVD fan Peter Peringer, we even sang some of those songs in our church services!). So of course I was hoping that this would live up to the stature of that work, but, sadly, I think this record fell so far short of that goal. I was actually somewhat depressed after my first listen. Some may disagree & I’d be happy to be wrong, but to my ears, this is not his finest hour. I know I will still check out anything he releases–he is indeed a wonderful person, whom I got to have a meal with when he was playing a concert at our church. But that can’t change my opinion of this album.
  • Balloon Balloon Balloon – Sharp Pins: I figured I could only have one album where the title was repeated thrice (see The Dears), but srsly, this was an amazing record. It sounded like some early Byrds or other comparable 1960’s rock bands demo tracks (along with a healthy Guided By Voices vibe), pretty much created by one guy, but when I received my order of the CD (late for Christmas!), the lyrics seemed so inane that I couldn’t bring myself to include it in the top 10. Still worthwhile to listen though–just don’t try to hard to make out the words!
  • Belong – Jay Som: In the past, I thought of this one-woman act as having a much more indie rock/alternative sound, but this new album is a bit over-produced mainstream pop for my taste. But there are still some really exceptional songs on here–I think anyone could enjoy the songcraftsmanship of this record!
  • Dance Called Memory – Nation of Language: I also picked this CD up at the new Fingerprints store, but when I played it on the way home, it fell far short of the retro 80’s New Order-esque sound that I’d loved so much on their 2023 album Strange Disciple. But still some solid cuts herein.
  • Deadbeat – Tame Impala: If you’ve read past Best Albums lists on this blog, you know that each Tame Impala album has made our top 10 each year they came out, but when I heard the first singles from this record (“Loser” and “Dracula”) I wasn’t feeling it. But I actually went back and listened to the whole record a few times and it grew on me, just not to the point where it would kick off one of the albums above. Definitely always a Kevin Parker fan though! Wunderkind, this guy!!
  • Sinister Grift – Panda Bear: I wanted to like this so much, being a huge fan of Animal Collective (singer-songwriter Noah Lennox’s main band) and his previous solo work, but this was more of a miss than a hit for me. Sorry Noah!
  • Straight Line Was a Lie – The Beths: This band has put out THREE solid indie-pop albums since 2018, but this one did not connect with me. So bummed. Their lyrics are among the cleverest and the tunes are so melodic, but it just didn’t land this time around. Check out their past albums though, especially Future Me Hates Me.

I’d love to hear where you disagree or what I might have missed below! Thanks for reading, friends!

A Decade of Bests (2000-2009)

When we first launched Lost in the Cloud in 2010, we were on a roll from our previous blog, hoping to take LITC into different territory. One thing we carried over from our previous blog was our love for lists, especially music lists. We began Lost in the Cloud with productive intentions, but life, as it can so often do, got in the way of our keeping up with the blog.

For the first six years, we were diligent in posting the lists of our favourite albums of the year, complete with short descriptions of each. In those last couple of dwindling years, our ‘Best Albums’ lists were becoming the only new material we were producing for the blog. In time, even that dropped off of our list of priorities and Lost in the Cloud went quiet.

This year, we have decided to revisit our ‘Best Albums’ lists and to even elaborate on our whole ‘Best Albums’ corpus by travelling all the way back to the prehistoric year that was 2000. This post is part one of two. With hindsight and in living with particular albums for longer, we have compiled lists of our ten favourite albums for each year from 2000-2019. Perhaps these lists will be of some interest for those who wish to walk down Memory Lane, or indeed, for those who might wonder if any of these [subjective] gems passed them by (as we have discovered from comparing our respective lists). Whatever you—dear reader—might glean from our produce, we are grateful for the opportunity to indulge in our list-making and music-listening passions here.

Elijah & Greg


— E —

  1. Figure 8
    Elliott Smith
  2. Kid A
    Radiohead
  3. The Sophtware Slump
    Grandaddy
  4. Lift Your Skinny Fists Like Antennas to Heaven
    Godspeed You! Black Emperor
  5. ÁGÆTIS BYRJUN
    Sigur Rós
  6. Bachelor No. 2
    Aimee Mann
  7. Winners Never Quit
    Pedro the Lion
  8. Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea
    PJ Harvey
  9. And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out
    Yo La Tengo
  10. Rising Tide
    Sunny Day Real Estate

— G —

  1. Kid A
    Radiohead
  2. Figure 8
    Elliott Smith
  3. Bachelor No. 2
    Aimee Mann
  4. All That You Can’t Leave Behind
    U2
  5. ÁGÆTIS BYRJUN
    Sigur Rós
  6. Fever & Mirrors
    Bright Eyes
  7. Heartbreaker
    Ryan Adams
  8. Rising Tide
    Sunny Day Real Estate
  9. Winners Never Quit
    Pedro the Lion
  10. MASS ROMANTIC
    The New Pornographers

— E —

  1. Amnesiac
    Radiohead
  2. Jane Doe
    Converge
  3. The Glow, Pt. 2
    The Microphones
  4. White Blood Cells
    The White Stripes
  5. Blue Screen Life
    Pinback
  6. Hot Shots II
    The Beta Band
  7. Vespertine
    Björk
  8. “Love and Theft”
    Bob Dylan
  9. The Photo Album
    Death Cab for Cutie
  10. Discovery
    Daft Punk

— G —

  1. The Texas-Jerusalem Crossroads
    Lift to Experience
  2. Oh, Inverted World
    The Shins
  3. Asleep in the back
    Elbow
  4. Musicforthemorningafter
    Pete Yorn
  5. Origin of Symmetry
    Muse
  6. The Invisible Band
    Travis
  7. The Only Reason I Feel Secure
    Pedro the Lion
  8. Skyscraper National Park
    Hayden
  9. The Photo Album
    Death Cab for Cutie
  10. AMNESIAC
    Radiohead

— E —

  1. Control 
    Pedro the Lion
  2. Turn on the Bright Lights 
    Interpol
  3. Fantastic Damage 
    El-P
  4. Alice / Blood Money
    Tom Waits
  5. The Creek Drank the Cradle
    Iron & Wine
  6. Sea Change
    Beck
  7. Unfortunately We’re Not Robots
    Curl Up & Die
  8. [AB] Life
    mewithoutYou
  9. We Are the Only Friends We Have
    Piebald
  10. Give Up
    Postal Service

— G —

  1. Control
    Pedro the Lion
  2. Lifted or The Story Is in the Soil, Keep Your Ear to the Ground
    Bright Eyes
  3. The Creek Drank the Cradle
    Iron & Wine
  4. Sea Change
    Beck
  5. The Last Broadcast 
    Doves
  6. Give Up 
    Postal Service
  7. A Rush of Blood to the Head 
    Coldplay
  8. Yankee Hotel Foxtrot
    Wilco
  9. Turn on the Bright Lights 
    Interpol
  10. The Seamonsters
    The Seamonsters

— E —

  1. Greetings from Michigan: The Great Lakes State 
    Sufjan Stevens
  2. The Ugly Organ 
    Cursive
  3. Hail to the Thief 
    Radiohead
  4. The Earth is Not a Cold Dead Place 
    Explosions in the Sky
  5. Sumday
    Grandaddy
  6. You Forgot it in People 
    Broken Social Scene
  7. Dear Catastrophe Waitress 
    Belle & Sebastian
  8. Monday at the Hug & Pint 
    Arab Strap
  9. Frail Words Collapse 
    As I Lay Dying
  10. Happy Songs for Happy People
    Mogwai

— G —

  1. Greetings from Michigan: The Great Lakes State 
    Sufjan Stevens
  2. Hail to the Thief
    Radiohead
  3. Cast of Thousands
    Elbow
  4. Absolution
    Muse
  5. Final Straw
    Snow Patrol
  6. Marvelous Things EP
    Eisley
  7. O
    Damien Rice
  8. Transatlanticism
    Death Cab for Cutie
  9. Log 22
    Bettie Serveert
  10. Desprate Youth, Blood Thirsty Babes
    TV on the Radio

— E —

  1. From a Basement on a Hill
    Elliott Smith
  2. Funeral
    Arcade Fire
  3. Seven Swans
    Sufjan Stevens
  4. Antics
    Interpol
  5. You Are the Quarry
    Morrissey
  6. Sung Tongs
    Animal Collective
  7. Achilles Heel
    Pedro the Lion
  8. Our Endless Numbered Days
    Iron & Wine
  9. A
    Cass McCombs
  10. How It Ends
    DeVotchKa

— G —

  1. Sung Tongs
    Animal Collective
  2. From a Basement on a Hill
    Elliott Smith
  3. Antics
    Interpol
  4. Seven Swans
    Sufjan Stevens
  5. Achilles Heel
    Pedro the Lion
  6. Our Endless Numbered Days
    Iron & Wine
  7. FUNERAL
    Arcade Fire
  8. The Autumns
    The Autumns
  9. How It Ends
    DeVotchKa
  10. Turning Tide
    The Seamonsters

— E —

  1. Illinois 
    Sufjan Stevens
  2. The One Above All, The End of All That Is 
    Curl Up & Die
  3. Emoh 
    Lou Barlow
  4. Takk...
    Sigur Rós
  5. Feels 
    Animal Collective
  6. LCD Soundsystem 
    LCD Soundsystem
  7. Headphones 
    Headphones
  8. And the Glass Handed Kites 
    Mew
  9. Guero 
    Beck
  10. Surf
    Roddy Frame

— G —

  1. Illinois
    Sufjan Stevens
  2. Takk...
    Sigur Rós
  3. Several Arrows Later
    Matt Pond PA
  4. Silent Alarm
    Bloc Party
  5. Feels
    Animal Collective
  6. Emoh
    Lou Barlow
  7. Andrew Bird & the Mysterious Production of Eggs
    Andrew Bird
  8. I’m Wide Awake It’s Morning
    Bright Eyes
  9. Headphones
    Headphones
  10. Pixel Revolt
    John Vanderslice

— E —

  1. Yellow House 
    Grizzly Bear
  2. The Avalanche 
    Sufjan Stevens
  3. Happy Hollow
    Cursive
  4. No Heroes 
    Converge
  5. Everything All the Time 
    Band of Horses
  6. Victory for the Comic Muse 
    The Divine Comedy
  7. Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers & Bastards 
    Tom Waits
  8. Sing the Greys 
    Frightened Rabbit
  9. Brother, Sister
    mewithoutYou
  10. The Eraser 
    Thom Yorke

— G —

  1. The Avalanche
    Sufjan Stevens
  2. Gang of Losers
    The Dears
  3. The End of History
    Fionn Regan
  4. The Eraser
    Thom Yorke
  5. Begin to Hope
    Regina Spektor
  6. Everything All the Time
    Band of Horses
  7. Sing the Greys
    Frightened Rabbit
  8. The Cost
    The Frames
  9. Fox Confessor Brings the Flood
    Neko Case
  10. Camping by the Railroad Tracks in December
    Harmony and Pollution

— E —

  1. Neon Bible
    Arcade Fire
  2. In Rainbows
    Radiohead
  3. Sound of Silver
    LCD Soundsystem
  4. Fourteen Autumns and Fifteen Winters
    The Twilight Sad
  5. Strawberry Jam
    Animal Collective
  6. White Chalk
    PJ Harvey
  7. Cease to Begin
    Band of Horses
  8. Dance Tonight! Revolution Tomorrow!
    Orchid
  9. The Shepherd’s Dog
    Iron & Wine
  10. Person pitch
    Panda Bear

— G —

  1. In Rainbows
    Radiohead
  2. Strawberry Jam
    Animal Collective
  3. Boxer
    The National
  4. A Few More Published Studies
    The XYZ Affair
  5. Wincing the Night Away
    The Shins
  6. PERSON PITCH
    Panda Bear
  7. Cease to Begin
    Band of Horses
  8. A WEEKEND IN THE CITY
    Bloc Party
  9. Voxtrot
    Voxtrot
  10. Neon Bible
    Arcade Fire

— E —

  1. The Midnight Organ Fight
    Frightened Rabbit
  2. Songs in A&E
    Spiritualized
  3. Fleet Foxes
    Fleet Foxes
  4. In Ear Park
    Department of Eagles
  5. Dig That Treasure
    Cryptacize
  6. Dropping the Writ
    Cass McCombs
  7. Microcastle
    Deerhunter
  8. Everything That Happens Will Happen Today
    David Byrne & Brian Eno
  9. In Ghost Colours
    Cut Copy
  10. Rip It Off
    Times New Viking

— G —

  1. The Midnight Organ Fight
    Frightened Rabbit
  2. Fleet Foxes
    Fleet Foxes
  3. The Seldom Seen Kid
    Elbow
  4. Vampire Weekend
    Vampire Weekend
  5. Með Suð Í Eyrum Við Spilum Endalaust
    Sigur Rós
  6. Dropping the Writ
    Cass McCombs
  7. Words & Music
    Aqualung
  8. In Ear Park
    Department of Eagles
  9. At War with Walls & Mazes
    Son Lux
  10. @#%&*! Smilers
    Aimee Mann

— E —

  1. Veckatimest
    Grizzly Bear
  2. Merriweather Post Pavilion
    Animal Collective
  3. Axe to Fall
    Converge
  4. Album
    Girls
  5. Forget the Night Ahead
    The Twilight Sad
  6. Logos
    Atlas Sound
  7. These Four Walls
    We Were Promised Jetpacks
  8. Mythomania
    Cryptacize
  9. The Pains of Being Pure at Heart
    The Pains of Being Pure at Heart
  10. Curse Your Branches
    David Bazan

— G —

  1. Merriweather Post Pavilion
    Animal Collective
  2. Middle Cyclone
    Neko Case
  3. Curse Your Branches
    David Bazan
  4. Veckatimest
    Grizzly Bear
  5. Far
    Regina Spektor
  6. Romanian Names
    John Vanderslice
  7. Oh My God, Charlie Darwin
    The Low Anthem
  8. Hospice
    The Antlers
  9. Manners
    Passion Pit
  10. Goodnight Unknown
    Lou Barlow

See our lists from 2010-2019 here.