Top 30 Albums

Feature / Music / Year End 2021
Scene Point Blank's Favorites: Year End (2021)

December 18, 2021

Scene Point Blank's Favorites: Year End (2021)
Scene Point Blank's Favorites: Year End (2021)

Pity the bands releasing new records this year, right? Another twelve months of uncertainty: will they be able to tour this album? Can they even get inside a studio? Will Adele's monopolisation of the world's supply of vinyl mean it can't get a 12" release?! 

But on the other hand: it's a rare opportunity for artists to take a step back, pause for breath and figure out their next step. What kind of album do they want to make, in light of... everything? With a captive audience who are crying out for something new to distract them from the global pandemic, it might also be true that the current year has proven extremely fruitful for musicians.

Who knows what the artists think (though you could read our Pass The Mic feature to hear it from the horse's mouth). But it's safe to conclude from this, our annual Favorite list, that some incredible music has been released in 2021. We've asked our staff to each assemble a list of their best albums of the year, and using some advanced mathematics we've sliced and diced these lists into one SUPER-LIST, to present the 30 best albums of the year – as determined by Scene Point Blank.

We've also given you the luxury of the entire list as a Spotify playlist (minus one black metal act who aren't on streaming sites) so you can spend almost twenty hours listening to the music we loved this year, and it's also embedded at the bottom of this page.

For now, though, read on to discover our favorite albums of 2021.

Overall list

1

Turnstile

Glow On

Roadrunner

This band has blown up fast, and deservedly so. The band’s fourth LP weaves through everything these boys have been perfecting while honing their sound throughout their past three records, their side projects, and their remix EP with house DJ Mall Grab. As ever, Turnstile brings us groovy polyrhythms, crunchy power chords, booming stand-out bass lines, and rousing sing-along screams from vocalist Brendan Yates. On this record, they add even more electronic effects, drum machines, and moments to catch your breath wherein you might hear a clean piano solo or a nearly-acapella ballad from bassist Franz Lyons.

Stephanie Thornton

2

Descendents

9th & Walnut

Epitaph

While I like new Descendents, their older stuff always had an intangible bite to it. The new stuff feels more sarcastic, while their earlier material was pissed off underneath that playful disposition. And that’s what you get on 9th & Walnut which is billed as the band’s eighth studio album, though the timeline is more complicated than that. These are songs written by the adolescent Descendents in the ‘70s, recorded in the ‘00s and touched up in the present. Of the 18 songs, 15 have never been released in any format, while a few predate Aukerman joining the group and mark his first time on recorded vocals. And what you get is modern production with angry, early punk movement sounds and subject matter. These are good songs that rip, rage and roar next to the classics of the era. Without the lengthy intro to describe how it was made, it would fit neatly into the band’s catalog 20, even 30, years ago.

Loren

3

Deafheaven

Infinite Granite

Sargent House

This is one of the most striking shifts in musical direction I’ve heard a band make. It’s also one of the few such shifts I’ve met where a band I previously did not care about turned into something I’m keeping on heavy rotation in my playlist. A very pleasant surprise to say the least. While I saw Deafheaven in the past as some kind of oddball amalgamation of blast-beat driven black metal slathered generously with an almost noisy tapestry of reverb and delay drenched shoegaze styled washes with a vocal delivery that was simply unintelligible, now things couldn’t be any more different. Infinite Granite is basically a shoegaze record that embraces equally dream pop leanings as well as post-rock ones. I think it’s a lovely combination and it’s executed so naturally that it feels like they’ve been doing this recipe for several albums. I really hope the band continue on this musical avenue for the foreseeable future. To me it feels like they’re doing a much better job in this area and quite frankly, I feel like Infinite Granite is one of the best albums of this year too. I wholeheartedly recommend this record to anyone looking to just drift and dream effortlessly – it’s as simple as that.

Robert Miklos (Piro)

4

The Armed

Ultrapop

Sargent House

The lack of any restraint. That is what defines The Armed’s latest effort in ULTRAPOP. The mysterious collective has been on the path towards post-hardcore enlightenment for a hot minute now, but their latest album exceeds all expectations. The Armed distill the energy of the hardcore punk scene of olds while tapping into the experimental aspects of mathcore and post-hardcore. The result is a brilliantly chaotic and abrupt record. And still as brutal and punishing as ULTRAPOP is, what remains, in the end, is this incredibly joyous and celebratory essence, oozing through its addictive hooks.

Spyros Stasis

5

Glitterer

Life Is Not A Lesson

Glitterer / Anti

The one-man side project of Ned Russin (formerly of Title Fight, Bad Seed, and several other Wilks-Barre hardcore bands), Glitterer gives a power-pop touch to post punk, with punchy drums and moody synths meshing well with fuzzy guitar tones and strong bass lines. Life Is Not A Lesson is the second full-length under the Glitterer moniker, a varied and subtly brooding album that runs at a concise 22 minutes. This is a perfect record for anyone interested in the catchier sides of post-hardcore, and it nestled deep in our respective rotations this year.

Campbell

6

AFI

Bodies

Rise Records

After a couple of slightly underbaked releases, AFI re-found their previously high standards with 2017's Blood album, and this follow-up Bodies is of a similar vein (if you'll pardon the pun): dark, brooding and mature. The electronic/synth driven elements are no longer unexpected and slightly tinged with novelty, but instead feel appropriate and enhancing. There are moments that hint at possible new genres (soundtrack, industrial) and a couple of mild mis-steps which don't tarnish the whole too much. This is the sound of a confident band which can turn itself in a range of directions almost at will. They can sometimes follow paths that lead nowhere or to places better left unvisited, but this is much more preferential than retreading the same old ground over and over.

Matt

7

μ-Ziq

Scurlage

Analogical Force

Mike Paradinas is one of the most important figures in the IDM scene. Having found the Planet Mu label, he has promoted a plethora of incredible and forward-thinking artists. At the same time, he has also been navigating the same sonic space through his μ-ziq project. Spending the best part of the ‘10s releasing μ-ziq’s lost albums, Paradinas finally returns with Scurlage, reminding everyone of his unique insight and capabilities. Moody and atmospheric, Scurlage moves through complex rhythmic patterns and unleashes its wistful melodies. In doing so it proves the relevance of Paradinas’ vision, how relevant it remains today, and how much we have missed it.

Spyros Stasis

8

Neighborhood Brats

Confines of Life

Dirt Cult

Neighborhood Brats play punk as you’d expect it to sound – regardless of year or era. It’s angry, aggressive and timeless. A review doesn’t require hyphens and subcategories. But while they’re easy to pin into a genre, they remain full of surprises, which is exceedingly rare. For every political lyric, fist punch in the air and shout-along moment, there’s a parallel left turn. It’s political punk. It’s energetic, even infectious (pardon the word choice in a post-pandemic world). It sounds fun and gets your toes tapping, all-the-while the lyrics are about serious, heavy and pissed off stuff. To lift a line from “Who Took The Rain,” it’s about standing on the edge of darkness and light. It’s exactly what you should want in a record if you say you’re a fan of punk music.

Loren

9

Slant

1집

Iron Lung

Slant is a 5-piece from South Korea -- not that you can tell the locale by the sound. It’s timeless and furious. It could be from DC in the 1980s or the Pacific Northwest in the 2010s. There are 10 songs here, none longer than two and a half minutes, and totaling 17-minutes from start-to-finish. It’s titled 1집, which is a Korean equivalent to self-titling a record, something kinda-sorta translated as “Volume 1.” It stomps and rages, but with some metallic flourishes here and there, often serving as a bridge. The vocals are so raw that it almost hurts to listen. I can’t say that 1집 reinvents hardcore, and I don’t think it’s supposed to. But it sure is cathartic. In a time when even the simplest items in daily life seem to add to stress instead of relief, 1집 blows off some steam every time I listen to it -- which is frequently.

Loren

10

Hanalei

Black Snow

A-F

It’s been ten years since Hanalei released One Big Night, which is a long time between records for anyone. Black Snow is different: it’s from the punk world, but not of the punk world. Black Snow is soft rock that draws influence from across the board. It bears the most similarity to the Weakerthans, with subtle country, highway rambling tones, and more. This isn’t balladry or even an author ruminating in self-reflection; it’s narrative storytelling. And the music matches with ebbs and flows of emotion and movement. The album is a concept record, or collage in Moss’ words, that tells of a not-so-distant future ravaged by humanity’s mistakes. The stories within are articulate and touching but the power goes beyond sitting down with a lyric sheet. Just listening, the tone of Black Snow is that of any working-class city that’s been scarred by history and natural forces. It’s honest, open and humble, but equally tireless and resilient, even hopeful.

Loren

11

DeeCracks

Serious Issues

Pirates Press

DeeCracks is not exactly new to the punkrock scene. Starting out as The Cretins in 2003, rebranding themselves to DeeCRACKS in 2007 this Austrian trio has some experience under their belts. Serious Issues is their fourth full length album. One of the things DeeCRACKS does to distinguish themselves from the faceless Ramones-clones of this world is they use a different vocal approach. These sixteen songs are diverse enough to keep you on the edge of your seat, but are coherent enough to make this one strong record. It is over before you know it. The balance of sweet and aggressive within the songs and the record as a whole is quite addictive and I find myself spinning this record over and over again.

Dennis

12

Low

HEY WHAT

Sub Pop

To call Low a pioneering act would be an understatement. Through the years Alan Sparhawk and Mimi Parker have reconfigured the rock structure to fit their unique vision. The overwhelming shoegaze force, indie rock concepts, and ethereal dream-pop aspects all bend to their will. Their latest work HEY WHAT is no different. Sparhawk and Parker once more deconstruct rock motifs, inject a wealth of sound design applications to build this impressive facade. But, what remains beneath this all is an offering of stunning songwriting, sending chills down your spine with its sentimental depth. As is the case with everything Low has produced.

Spyros Stasis

13

LLNN

Unmaker

PELAGIC RECORDS

LLNN plays a style that is difficult to describe. Is it post-metal? I would say yes, but without the long build-ups I associate with that style. Is it post-hardcore? Yeah, it has some characteristics I associate with that style too, but it is much too heavy to really fit that bill. Their bandcamp tags tell me it’s hardcore and sludge and synths. The synth part is the biggest difference with their previous band The Psyke Project. Where the riffs are very recognisable, these added layers of synths give them a whole different feeling. If you have some tolerance to harsh music, give this band a go. Now, if you'll excuse me, I am off discovering the back catalogue of this band!

Dennis

14

The Obits

Die at the Zoo

Outer Battery Records

Die at the Zoo is a live recording from Obits, live in Brisbane, Australia, in 2012. There are 16 songs from the band’s catalog and it was recently released on limited vinyl by Outer Battery. There are probably two main angles for looking at a live record: is it capturing a time and place, or is it capturing an essence of the band. (And, yes, live records can do both simultaneously.) I see Die at the Zoo as the second of those two angles. Obits themselves are a no frills rock band, recalling a simpler era when “rock” was a genre instead of something with four extra hyphens and a dress code to match. I’ll admit I’ve never seen Obits live, but this fits what I expect: little banter, music center stage, and a timeless feel that eclipses that this is a very specific live recording. It’s what I imagine the band sounded like at every concert. This record hits the spot. It’s not reinventing the wheel, but you don’t fix what isn’t broken. Obits give a smooth, pretty ride every time. And so does Die at the Zoo.

Loren

15

King Woman

Celestial Blues

Relapse

Celestial Blues majesty lies in the grandiose narrative that Kristina Esfandiari creates with her distinct voice, which takes the listener on a journey of the macabre. Having fallen from the light of heaven into the chasms of hell, King Woman's protagonist begins a voyage of discovery through religious artifacts and doomed elegance. The hypnotic intonation of Esfandiari's voice merges with weighted riffs and melodies that creep into your brain as the album moves towards the idea of ascension, crawling though the darkness to find the sliver of light needed for the ultimate retribution. It's a powerful work and one that needs much time to absorb, becoming all the more rewarding with each listen.

Cheryl

16

Amyl and the Sniffers

Comfort To Me

Rough Trade

Euphoric high that is able to help the coming down period. Blasts of improved, well-established lyrical content with a heavy nodding state to Australia's wealth of musical landscape.

Christopher D

17

Young Thug

Punk

300 Entertainment

Thugger has been the master of his own brand of eccentricity for years, and his unwavering dedication to soaring head-first into his creative indulgences is nothing less than admirable. Punk has touches of 2017’s acoustic-focused Beautiful Thugger Girls, and in areas it isn’t quite as replayable as 2019’s So Much Fun, but it’s a compelling exercise in fearless pursuit of a unique corner of hip hop. He increasingly serves as a counterweight to a lot of mainstream rap, while proving with his glutton of features that he can always stand tall alongside any major-label player. Young Thug remains an addictive and entrancing force that truly can’t be ignored.

Campbell

18

The Muslims

Fuck These Fucking Fascists

Epitaph

Fuck These Fucking Fascists is the fourth full-length by the Muslims, and their first on Epitaph. As the name suggests, it’s complex music steeped in subtle political theory. Just kidding. This is straight-up angry, screamy punk with overt politics. Which is often needed, especially in the current environment. Besides the title track, other song titles include “Crotch Pop A Cop,” “Illegals,” “Hands Up, Don’t Shoot,” and the utterly ridiculous “John McCain’s Ghost Sneaks Into The White House And Tea Bags The President” give away the idea right up front. Ain’t nothing wrong with that. The band tells it like it is. This is the kind of political punk that got me interested in the genre when I was younger. It’s direct and it isn’t afraid to ruffle feathers. It’s also pretty damn well done, with varied sounds between songs, dual vocalists changing things up, and well layered harmonies and even a few effects. Like any music this lyrically focused, some songs on the record overshadow the rest and a few of the songs here give off filler vibes but it never detracts from the energy. It’s urgent, it’s angry, and it wants you to actually listen.

Loren

19

The Rememberables

Breathe

Adagio830

What do you get when you mix bigger than life guitars of Dinosaur Jr. with the poppy hooks and melodies of Weezer and a healthy dose of the best earlie ninenties grunge? The sound of The Rememberables comes pretty close! Compared to their previous self-titled album this one is a bit more upbeat, meaning there's less slow burners on it. And it is the lesser album for it. These slower tracks added some extra depth and emotion that is only partially available on Breathe. Is that a big problem? Well, if your songwriting is as good and smooth as that of The Rememberables it should still guaranty you entrance to a couple best of year lists and look where we are now.

Dennis

20

Partial Traces

Wild Surf/Quiet Blues

Salinas Records

Partial Traces play pop-inspired keyboard rock – but not at all the kind you imagine when you hear those words. In pop songs, the keyboard generally brings melodrama or atmosphere. In Partial Traces, those two ideas meet in the middle. It’s emotional and serious, but instead of dramatic, it’s tonal. It feels real and authentic, which largely comes from the drums, which add a human nuance to the otherworldly sounds. It’s never quite predictable and always full of surprises that rise and fall like the tide, fading out at the end or…depending on your perspective, just getting started again. It’s tranquil, but full of uncertainty.

Loren

21

Lingua Ignota

Sinner Get Ready

Sargent House

It is an act of courage to redefine oneself. Especially when the initial recipe and direction has been exciting and challenging. Yet, when a project is as intricate as Kristen Hayter’s Lingua Ignota there should not be any surprise when evolution is afoot. The nature of Lingua Ignota has always been to be provoking and daring. With SINNER GET READY Hayter still retains these aspects. Hell, she even enhances their presence. The tools might have changed, but the result remains as poignant and terrifying as ever. It is amazing how many things one can achieve with a few powerful piano keystrokes. A timbral storm causing havoc, tearing a caustic void into the ethereal form. Hayter has introduced a mirror image, a further reflection of Lingua Ignota. And in the process she has again outdone herself, producing her best work to date.

Spyros Stasis

22

San Salvador

La Grande Folie

Music Development Company

There’s nothing like a good vocal driven ensemble am I right? Well, I don’t know about you but I find myself impressed to the highest degrees by such bands. As a result, I somehow stumbled into San Salvador’s La Grande Folie. Little did I know that I will be thoroughly enthralled by this record. I started listening to it with basically no expectations or ideas about what I will be in for. The short version is that I was in for the ride of a lifetime, musically speaking.  Honestly, I don’t think I’ve ever heard a record that made me say ‘what the fuck is this?!’ and ‘what the fuck is that?!’ so many times with such an increasingly pleasant and positive intention and tone behind each utterance. Everything about La Grande Folie is slathered generously in a stupendous aura of wonder. It’s a spectacular experience to partake in and I wholeheartedly recommend it to any and all music lovers, regardless of their musical preferences. I feel like this is the type of album that speaks to people beyond their tastes. There’s something so intimately primordial about it in that sense, which manages to communicate with the listener. I, of course, also urge any and all music lovers to catch a live show if possible.

Robert Miklos (Piro)

23

Lamp Of Murmuur

Submission and Slavery

Black Gangrene Productions

Lamp Of Murmuur's star has been on the ascent since their first demo appeared from the ether in 2019. Since then, the enigmatic M has built mystery and intrigue around a project that melds goth and post-punk with raw black metal in ways that are both riveting and vulnerable. Submission and Slavery is outwardly sensual but the introspective aspect allows a deeper glance at M's thoughts and the horrors that can be found there.

Cheryl

24

Grouper

Shade

Kranky

When an artist is competent and daring enough, they can open up new pathways for an entire genre. Liz Harris is such an exemplar of artistic creativity, with her solo project Grouper dragging folk music into its new form. This is true for Grouper’s latest work Shade, as the record balances between the folk lineage of olds and the abrupt distortive colorisms of today. And this dichotomy is where the true greatness lies for Grouper. No matter if it is just through a single acoustic guitar, or through a storm of ambient loops and soft walls of noise, Harris’ message remains as emotive and sentimental as ever. And as relevant as ever

Spyros Stasis

25

Bruiser Wolf

Dope Game $tupid

Bruiser Brigade

Amidst a powerhouse year for the Detroit crew Bruiser Brigade, Bruiser Wolf shone brightly with his distinctive and forceful debut album, which is equal parts bold, clever, and hilariously biting. Nothing this year got stuck in my head so easily and consistently; start with “Chess Move$” or “I’m An Instrument.” As highlighted on our mid-year feature, “his delivery is high-pitched with a quick, weaving flow that’s reminiscent of E-40, over producer Raphy’s perfectly stripped-down beats.” 2021 was a banner year of resurgence for the collective -- massive highlights in the TV62 compilation, Zelooperz’s Van Gogh's Left Ear, and Fat Ray’s Santa Barbara -- and every record they released is worth exploring on its own.

Campbell

26

Iron Maiden

Senjutsu

Parlophone

Yes, this album suffers from the same errors the last couple of albums suffered from. It is bloated and really needs someone to trim some minutes of most songs. The production is... well I am not a big fan. I am also very aware that this is nothing like their eighties output. But I don't expect them to rehash that stuff. Hidden within this monster of an album is a very likable heavy metal album chock full of folky melodies and hints to 70's prog. It is very enjoyable and I've spend more than enough time with it to conclude this is on of the better albums since Dickinsons return to the band.

Dennis

27

Fiddlehead

Between The Richness

Run for Cover Records

Has anyone else been living under a rock as I have? I hadn't heard of Fiddlehead until earlier this year when a friend of mine caught Covid at their show, and named this record, "the best album to catch Covid to." Fiddlehead is the Post-Hardcore supergroup from members of Have Heart, Basement, and Intent. Their sophomore album, Between the Richness, captures grief and coping with it, while also breaking free from it to move forward. They maintain the momentum they gained from their debut, Springtime and Blind, but hit back with an album that sounds fuller and more realized. Between the Richness ranges from catchy and aggressive, to intimate and subdued, and all at the right pace.

Aaron H

28

Dan Sartain

Arise, Dan Sartain, Arise!

One Little Independent Records

RIP Dan Sartain. Arise! 

Greatly missed. Should have been bigger than any musical diety.

An old soul with a penchant for hooks 

A bookend to a short but storied career.

Christopher D

29

Arooj Aftab

Vulture Prince

New Amsterdam

This third album from Brooklyn's Arooj Aftab makes her Pakistani heritage clear and interweaves her powerful voice with traditional Urdu ghazals (think south Asian blues), with harps, strings and synths making up the majority of the instrumentation. It's enveloping, sultry, poignant and sorrowful all at once, with her distinctive voice breaking through and swelling into each song. It's minimalist without being background music, folk-influenced without being twee, and utterly breathtaking when you sit back and take it in.

Matt

30

Olivia Rodrigo

Sour

Geffen

The year's coming to a close and theoretically, the honeymoon period with Olivia Rodrigo's Pop-coup should be over, but sorry Punks! Sour is unequivocally one of the best albums of the year. A near perfectly crafted Pop album that even has some hints of punk tendencies. I mean, her opening track, "Brutal," is accused of ripping off Elvis Costello's "Pump is Up," and sounds like she was influenced by Bikini Kill. Meanwhile hit single, "good 4 u" had to retroactively give Paramore writing credits (which is a bit of an eyeroll). Sour has its bits of Pop-Punk, but doesn't stray far from the Singer-Songwriter tree harboring Phoebe Bridgers or Lucy Dacus. She's just a bit more Pop about it.

Aaron H

Individual staff lists

Aaron H's list

  1. Olivia Rodrigo – Sour (Geffen)
  2. Thrice – Horizons/East (Epitaph)
  3. AFI – Bodies (Rise Records)
  4. Turnstile – Glow On (Roadrunner)
  5. Deafheaven – Infinite Granite (Sargent House)
  6. Squid – Bright Green Field (Warp)
  7. Courtney Barnett – Things Take Time, Take Time (Milk!)
  8. Halsey – If I Can't Have Love, I Want Power (Capitol)
  9. The Bronx – VI (ATO)
  10. Fucked Up – Year of the Horse (Tankcrimes)
  11. Iron Maiden – Senjutsu (Parlophone)
  12. Converge & Chelsea Wolfe – Bloodmoon: I (Epitaph)
  13. CHVRCHES – Screen Violence (EMI)
  14. Chubby and the Gang – The Mutt's Nuts (Partisan)
  15. Early Riser – Vocations (A-F)
  16. Cold Cave – Fate in Seven Lessons (Heartworm)
  17. Sleater-Kinney – Path of Wellness (MOM+POP)
  18. Fiddlehead – Between The Richness (Run for Cover Records)
  19. Glitterer – Life Is Not A Lesson (Glitterer / Anti)
  20. Partial Traces – Wild Surf/Quiet Blues (Salinas Records)
  21. Sincere Engineer – Bless My Psyche (Hopeless)
  22. Amyl and the Sniffers – Comfort To Me (Rough Trade)
  23. Quicksand – Distant Populations (Epitaph)
  24. The Muslims – Fuck These Fucking Fascists (Epitaph)

Campbell's list

  1. Bruiser Wolf – Dope Game $tupid (Bruiser Brigade)
  2. Home Is Where – I Became Birds (Father/Daughter Records)
  3. Chill Children – Tokyo Nights (Chill Children)
  4. Bachelor – Doomin' Sun (Polyvinyl)
  5. Fake Fruit – Fake Fruit (Rocks In Your Head)
  6. Pink Siifu – GUMBO'! (Self-Released)
  7. Maxo Kream – Weight of the World (RCA Records)
  8. Buggin – Brainfreeze (Flatspot Records)
  9. Turnstile – Glow On (Roadrunner)
  10. Deafheaven – Infinite Granite (Sargent House)
  11. Glitterer – Life Is Not A Lesson (Glitterer / Anti)
  12. Boldy James – Bo Jackson (ALC / Boldy James)
  13. Hanalei – Black Snow (A-F)
  14. Grouper – Shade (Kranky)
  15. Young Thug – Punk (300 Entertainment)
  16. Descendents – 9th & Walnut (Epitaph)
  17. Vacation – Existential Risks & Rewards (Salinas Records)
  18. μ-Ziq – Scurlage (Analogical Force)
  19. Low – HEY WHAT (Sub Pop)
  20. Bootlicker – Self-Titled (Neon Waste, Static Shock Records)

Cheryl's list

  1. Lamp Of Murmuur – Submission and Slavery (Black Gangrene Productions)
  2. Paysage d'Hiver – Geister (Kunsthall Produktionen)
  3. Trhä – endlhëtonëg (Independent)
  4. The Ruins Of Beverast – The Thule Grimoires (Ván Records)
  5. Reverorum ib Malacht – Not Here (Rubeus Obex)
  6. Old Nick – A New Generation of Vampiric Conspiracies (Grime Stone Records)
  7. Dream Unending – Tide Turns Eternal (20 Buck Spin)
  8. Këkht Aräkh – Pale Swordsman (Livor Mortis)
  9. Tardigrada – Vom Bruch Bis Zur Freiheit (Eisenwald)
  10. Skepticism – Companion (Svart Records)
  11. Arkhtinn – 二度目の災害 (Prava Kollectiv)
  12. Stormkeep – Tales of Othertime (Ván Records)
  13. Koldovstvo – Ни царя, ни бога (Extraconscious Records, Babylon Doom Cult Records, Fólkvangr Records)
  14. Panopticon – ...And Again Into the Light (Bindrune Recordings)
  15. Circle Of Ouroborus – Kiromantia (His Wounds)
  16. Fluisteraars – Gegrepen Door de Geest der Zielsontluiking (Eisenwald)
  17. Ossaert – Pelgrimsoord (Argento Records)
  18. King Woman – Celestial Blues (Relapse)
  19. Baazlvaat – The Higher Power (Independent)
  20. C R O W N – The End Of All Things (Pelagic Records)
  21. Fyrnask – VII - Kenoma (Ván Records)
  22. Empyrium – Über den Sternen (Prophecy Productions)
  23. Mesarthim – CLG J02182–05102 (Independent)
  24. Lantlos – Wildhund (Prophecy Productions)
  25. Amenra – De Doorn (Relapse)

Christopher D's list

  1. Dan Sartain – Arise, Dan Sartain, Arise! (One Little Independent Records)
  2. Amyl and the Sniffers – Comfort To Me (Rough Trade)
  3. The Obits – Die at the Zoo (Outer Battery Records)
  4. Screamers – Demo Hollywood: 1977 (Superior Viaduct)
  5. Bad Brains – Bad Brains (Bad Brains Records)
  6. The Monsters – You're Class, I'm Trash (Voodoo Rhythm)
  7. Rudimentary Peni – Great War (Sealed Records)
  8. NEW YORK JUNK – DREAMING EP (Tar Beach Music)
  9. Steve Conte – Bronx Cheer (Wicked Cool Records)
  10. Donovan – I Am The Shaman 7" (Donovan Discs)
  11. Necromancy – In The Eyes Of Death (Urbain Grandier)
  12. Honshu Wolves – Cosmic Creature Capture (Voodoo Rhythm)
  13. Descendents – 9th & Walnut (Epitaph)
  14. Nick Cave and Warren Ellis – Carnage (Goliath Records)
  15. The Living – 1982 (Loosegroove)
  16. Neon Christ – 1984 (Southern Lord)
  17. The Black Halos – Uncommonwealth (EP) (Cursed Blessings Records)
  18. Wipers – Youth Of America -Anniversary Edition: 1981-2021 RSD (Jackpot Records)
  19. The Dirtiest – Sovranista (Slovenly)
  20. The Lurkers – The Boys In The Corner-7” (Damaged Goods)

Dennis's list

  1. LLNN – Unmaker (PELAGIC RECORDS)
  2. Impure Wilhelmina – Antidote (Season of Mist)
  3. Shevils – Miracle Of The Sun (Independent)
  4. DeeCracks – Serious Issues (Pirates Press)
  5. Neighborhood Brats – Confines of Life (Dirt Cult)
  6. Blaze Bayley – War Within Me (Blaze Bayley Recordings)
  7. Black Moon Mother – Illusions Under The Sun (Petrichor)
  8. Slant – 1집 (Iron Lung)
  9. Hysterese – Hysterese (This Charming Man Records)
  10. Dauthuz – Cold (Stageblast Records)
  11. Zao – The Crimson Corridor (Observed/Observer Recordings)
  12. Turnstile – Glow On (Roadrunner)
  13. John Paul Keith – The Rhythm Of The City (Wild Honey Records)
  14. Nick Waterhouse – Promenade Blue (Innovative Leisure Records)
  15. Time & Pressure – Halfway Down (Version City Blues)
  16. New Pagans – The Seed, The Vessel, The Roots And All (Big Scary Monsters)
  17. Thy Catafalque – Vadak (Seasons Of Mist)
  18. 1914 – Where Fear And Weapons Meet (Napalm Records)
  19. Rata Negra – Una Vida Vulgar (La Vida Es Un Mus)
  20. Desenterradas – Danzando En El Caos (Metadona Records)
  21. Iron Maiden – Senjutsu (Parlophone)
  22. Burial – Inner Gateways To The Slumbering Equilibrium At The Center Of The Cosmos (Everlasting Spew Records)
  23. Actors – Acts Of Worship (Artoffact Records)
  24. The Rememberables – Breathe (Adagio830)
  25. Cryptosis – Bionic Swarm (Century Media)
  26. Esses – Bloodletting For The Lonely (Atakra Productions)
  27. Kanga – You And I WIll Never Die (Artoffact Records)
  28. Tower – Shock To The System (Cruz Del Sur Records)
  29. Slow Crush – Hush (Church Road Records, Quiet Panic Records)
  30. Mujeres Podridas – Muerte En Paraíso (Beach Impediment Records)

Loren's list

  1. Descendents – 9th & Walnut (Epitaph)
  2. Talk Show Host – Mid-Century Modern (Disconnect/Disconnect, Wiretap Records)
  3. Hanalei – Black Snow (A-F)
  4. The Muslims – Fuck These Fucking Fascists (Epitaph)
  5. ONETWOTHREE – ONETWOTHREE (Kill Rock Stars)
  6. The Mimes – Plastic Pompeii (Lets Pretend)
  7. Mikey Erg – Mikey Erg (Rad Girlfriend Records)
  8. Slant – 1집 (Iron Lung)
  9. Neighborhood Brats – Confines of Life (Dirt Cult)
  10. Partial Traces – Wild Surf/Quiet Blues (Salinas Records)
  11. Come Closer – Pretty Garbage (Pirates Press)
  12. Sincere Engineer – Bless My Psyche (Hopeless)
  13. Raging Nathans – Waste My Heart (Rad Girlfriend Records)
  14. Heart & Lung – Twistin' The Knife Away (Red Scare Industries)
  15. Needles//Pins – Needles//Pins (Dirt Cult)
  16. Electric Chair – Social Capital (Iron Lung)
  17. DeeCracks – Serious Issues (Pirates Press)
  18. Stiff Richards – State Of Mind (Drunken Sailor)
  19. Totally Slow – Casual Drag (Refresh Records)
  20. The Obits – Die at the Zoo (Outer Battery Records)
  21. Lucy Dacus – Home Video (Matador)
  22. Vacation – Existential Risks & Rewards (Salinas Records)
  23. Nopes – Djörk (Magnetic Eye Records)
  24. Tomahawk – Tonic Immobility (Ipecac)
  25. Luz de Gas – Luz de Gas (Iron Lung)

Matt's list

  1. Arooj Aftab – Vulture Prince (New Amsterdam)
  2. The Armed – Ultrapop (Sargent House)
  3. Dave – We're All Alone in This Together (Neighbourhood Recordings)
  4. Penfriend – Exotic Monsters (Independent)
  5. Matt Sweeney / Bonnie “Prince” Billy – Superwolves (Drag City)
  6. AFI – Bodies (Rise Records)
  7. Send More Paramedics – The Final Feast (Independent)

Robert Miklos (Piro)'s list

  1. San Salvador – La Grande Folie (Music Development Company)
  2. BLACKSHAPE – BLACKSHAPE (Independent)
  3. Floating Points with Pharoah Sanders & The London Symphony Orchestra – Promises (Luaka Bop)
  4. Keygen Church – ░█░█░░█░█░█░ (Independent)
  5. Kauan – Ice Fleet (Artoffact)
  6. Benthos – II (Independent)
  7. Sequelae – Systemic Epilepsis (Independent)
  8. Epiphanic Truth – Dark Triad: Bitter Psalms to a Sordid Species (Independent)
  9. Tomoko Omura – Branches Vol. 2 (Outside In Music)
  10. Laüstic – La Canzone del Cefaloforo (Cursed Monk Records)
  11. Musk Ox – Inheritance (Anamnesis Arts)
  12. Ophidian I – Desolate (Season of Mist)
  13. Burial in the Sky – The Consumed Self (Rising Nemesis Records)
  14. Fawn Limbs – Darwin Falls (Roman Numeral Records, Wolves & Vibrancy Records)
  15. Alora Crucible – Thymiamatascension (House of Mythology)
  16. Deafheaven – Infinite Granite (Sargent House)
  17. Leprous – Aphelion (InsideOut Music)
  18. Miki Sawada & Brendon Randall-Myers – A Kind of Mirror (Independent)
  19. Kinkajous – Being Waves (Running Circle)
  20. LLNN – Unmaker (PELAGIC RECORDS)
  21. Hippotraktor – Meridian (Pelagic Records)
  22. SEIMS – FOUR (Art As Catharsis)
  23. Kayo Dot – Moss Grew on the Swords and Plowshares Alike (Prophecy Productions)
  24. Voices – Breaking the Trauma Bond (Church Road Records)
  25. Maybeshewill – No Feeling is Final (The Robot Needs Home Collective)

Spyros Stasis's list

  1. Lingua Ignota – Sinner Get Ready (Sargent House)
  2. Low – HEY WHAT (Sub Pop)
  3. The Armed – Ultrapop (Sargent House)
  4. Yuko Araki – End of Trilogy (Room40)
  5. King Woman – Celestial Blues (Relapse)
  6. city & i.o. – Chaos Is God Neighbour (Éditions Appærent)
  7. Antediluvian – The Divine Punishment (Nuclear War Now!)
  8. μ-Ziq – Scurlage (Analogical Force)
  9. Utopia – Stalker (APF)
  10. L'Rain – Fatigue (Mexican Summer)
  11. Oriflamme – L’égide ardente (Sepulchral Productions)
  12. She Spread Sorrow – Huntress (Cold Spring)
  13. Archspire – Bleed The Future (Season of Mist)
  14. Space Afrika – Honest Labour (Dais)
  15. Genghis Tron – Dream Weapon (Relapse)
  16. Pan Daijing – Jade (Pan)
  17. Autarkh – Formed In Motion (Season of Mist)
  18. Grouper – Shade (Kranky)
  19. Pupil Slicer – Mirrors (Prosthetic)
  20. Pierce With Arrow – Shatter (Dais Records)
  21. Vouna – Atropos (Profound Lore)
  22. Erika de Casier – Sensational (4AD)
  23. Seputus – Phantom Indigo (Willowtip)
  24. Iceage – Seek Shelter (Mexican Summer)
  25. Monte Penumbra – As Blades in the Firmament (End All Life)

Stephanie Thornton's list

  1. Turnstile – Glow On (Roadrunner)
  2. Kanye West – Donda (G.O.O.D. Music/ Def Jam)
  3. Militarie Gun – All Roads Lead To The Gun II (Alternatives Label)
  4. Lil Nas X – Montero (Columbia Records)
  5. The Rememberables – Breathe (Adagio830)
  6. Glitterer – Life Is Not A Lesson (Glitterer / Anti)
  7. shame – Drunk Tank Pink (Dead Oceans)
  8. Viagra Boys – Welfare Jazz (YEAR0001)
  9. Spiritual Cramp – Here Comes More Bad News (Spiritual Cramp)
  10. Quicksand – Distant Populations (Epitaph)
  11. Smirk – EP (Total Punk Records)
  12. Young Thug – Punk (300 Entertainment)
  13. Spirit of the Beehive – ENTERTAINMENT. DEATH (Saddle Creek)
  14. Fiddlehead – Between The Richness (Run for Cover Records)
  15. μ-Ziq – Scurlage (Analogical Force)
Scene Point Blank's Favorites: Year End (2021)
Scene Point Blank's Favorites: Year End (2021)

Series: Year End 2021

Our roundup of the best music from the worst year (since the previous one, anyway).

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FEST LIBS 22

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