28 May 2025
Here's how it works: The Recent Releases chart brings together critical reaction to new albums from more than 50 sources worldwide. It's updated daily. Albums qualify with 5 reviews, and drop out after 6 weeks into the longer timespan charts.
Browse specific styles
Our archive of chart news from the past, and present.
Sparks MAD!
It may not be as consistent as some of their other albums, but there's still quite a bit of Sparks' witty tale-spinning for fans to enjoy All Music
Sports Team Boys These Days
For a band that began as two kids fascinated by experimenting with sound, they’ve transformed themselves into two of the most adept composers of the modern era, and this may well be one of their greatest achievements to date Far Out
This isn’t an album built to obsess over, but one to live alongside. It’s background music for smart friends, good snacks, and too much beer Northern Transmissions
Rico Nasty Lethal
Nasty’s latest LP paints an intimate portrait of an artist whose propensity to rage is just as strong as her motivation to grow Paste Magazine
The duo’s 28th album is a colorful collage of bubbling synthesizers, searing guitar, and chaotic string quartets. Though the band’s career spans over 50 years, their endurance hasn’t faltered in the slightest Paste Magazine
The London sextet’s latest LP pivots from post-punk to a warm, radio-friendly rock sound that’s pillowy, soft, and non-threatening Paste Magazine
Stereolab Instant Holograms On Metal Film
Getting lost in their technicolour world will always be such a pleasure. If they come back soon or if it’s another 15 years, it seems unlikely they’ll ever be taken for granted again God Is In The TV
Car Seat Headrest The Scholars
Like a friendship (or band, real or otherwise), it blossoms over time Under The Radar
The album is fluid, organic, and very Stereolab Slant Magazine
These New Puritans Crooked Wing
The Essex duo’s first record in six years is an organ-heavy affair exploring religion and ritual The FT
Capturing the inspiring spark in bygone visions of what the future could be is one of Stereolab's greatest strengths, and the brilliant ways they do this on Instant Holograms on Metal Film don't just live up to their legacy - they push it forward All Music
Pop classicists with a heart of gold, Sparks are busy out-pacing the copyists, and reminding us all exactly why they remain so beloved Clash
Tune-Yards Better Dreaming
After the introspection of recent records, Merrill Garbus and Nate Brenner’s sixth LP sounds refreshingly unburdened, with a newfound focus on jubilant vocals and danceable beats Pitchfork
In an era when so much politically aware music feels either performative or joyless, Stereolab have made something far more valuable: a record of moral seriousness and emotional openness, a reminder that the world we want is already stirring in us Under The Radar
With almost 30 albums under their complementary but not quite matching belts, Ron and Russell Mael show no sign of slowing down or stagnating. MAD! doesn’t surpass their recent works but neither does it repeat them; a plateau of sorts, perhaps, but an extraordinary one Spectrum Culture
As we're sure you are aware this is a really tough time for websites like ours. So we are asking you to help support us in any way you can via Patreon. Whether it's a small amount each month or a one-off payment, everything we receive will be put back into making ADM as good as it can possibly be.
"May just be their most uplifting and inspiring work" (9/10 - The Line Of Best Fit). "May emerge as one of the Oakland duo’s all-time great records after a few years’ passage" (7.8/10 - Paste)
Since we've been around, that is. So, the highest-rated albums from the past twelve years or so. Rankings are calculated to two decimal places.
Kendrick Lamar To Pimp A Butterfly
Fiona Apple Fetch The Bolt Cutters
Spiritbox Tsunami Sea
Kendrick Lamar Damn.
D'Angelo And The Vanguard Black Messiah
Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds Ghosteen
Self Esteem Prioritise Pleasure
Bob Dylan Rough and Rowdy Ways
Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds Skeleton Tree
Frank Ocean Channel Orange