Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Best of 2025 - The Album List

Happy to share our year-end list. This year, the album selection is shorter than usual, while our singles list expands to the customary top 50. Although there were several strong releases, few emerged as defining statements of the year. Still, as ever, the most compelling moments came from artists embracing transformation—through comebacks, reinventions, and subtle evolutions that kept their image engaging. Happy New Year!!

01. Pulp - More [Rough Trade]

Their first album in twenty-four years, More proves that Pulp has succeeded where most bands fail: they’ve returned not to relive past glories, but to thoughtfully extend their story. Jarvis Cocker and the gang gently pull at the past, revisiting the wry observation and the swooning orchestration that defined their peak, yet filter it all through a lens of mature reflection.  The result is a reunion that feels essential, a collection of songs that are both comfortingly familiar and quietly surprising. It doesn’t try to be a new Different Class again; instead, it offers something perhaps more valuable reinventing the band in the 20s.

 

02. Allie X - Happiness Is Going to Get You [AWAL]

In less than a year, Allie X has followed the dark stylish Girl with No Face with a brand-new studio album that boldly reinvents her once more. Happiness Is Going to Get You retains her signature, meticulously crafted synth-pop foundations but brilliantly expands its texture, introducing organic piano textures that add warm humanity to her crystalline electronic world. This sophisticated evolution is matched by a striking visual transformation, a avant-garde homage to the legendary Klaus Nomi. More than just a sequel, this is a daring next act: a record proving Allie X is in a relentless, in her artistic journey.

 

03. The Horrors - Night Life [Fiction Records]

Night Life is the sixth release by The Horrors and their debut on Fiction Records, arriving seven years after their fifth album, V. Once again, the band operates in the shadowy realm of post-punk, delivering a confident and compelling statement from a group that fully understands the dark allure of its chosen terrain. Since Skying (in 2009 undiscovered), every album has successfully charted on our year-end list, cementing The Horrors as one of the most consistent and long-standing favorite bands on Burning Flame.

 

04. Heartworms - Glutton for Punishment [Speedy Wunderground]

Glutton for Punishment is a debut album by Josephine Orme who records under the name Heartworms. Prior to this she released one EP and several singles in the last two years. Her music is rooted in post-punk, but also blends goth, industrial and coldwave. Orme’s voice is commanding rather than confessional, turning restraint into power and tension into atmosphere. Stark, focused and deeply immersive, this is one of the most compelling dark post-punk statements of the year.

 

05. Sharon Van Etten & The Attachment Theory - Sharon Van Etten & The Attachment Theory [Jagjaguwar]

Sharon Van Etten’s new collaboration with The Attachment Theory, her long-time backing band, now fully credited collaborators, marks another thrilling delivery. This album bridges the brooding introspection of her earlier work and the bold synthscapes of Remind Me Tomorrow with new-found confidence. Slow nocturnal synth-driven tunes retain a deep eighties moodiness, yet are offset by bouncy post-punk elements. The result is a record that feels intimately raw landing less as a retro homage and more as a vital, contemporary chapter in the new wave tradition.


EPs of relevance:

Mothermary - Non-Duality

The WAEVE - Eternal

NightCrawl - Cold War Feeling

NightCrawl - Strange

Automelodi - Cavallo



Other albums not ranked:

Wolf Alice - The Clearing

The Hidden Cameras - Bronto

Men I Trust - Equus caballus 

Men I Trust - Equus Asinus

Miley Cyrus - Something Beautiful

Jenny Hval - Iris Silver Mist

The Weeknd - Hurry Up Tomorrow

Shura - I Got Too Sad for My Friends

Tame Impala - Deadbeat

Saint Etienne - International

Kim Wilde - Closer

Yndling - Time Time Time (I'm in the Palm of Your Hand) 

Jenny Hval - Iris Silver Mist

Stereolab - Instant Holograms on Metal Film 

Lilly Allen - West End Girl

Geoffrey O'Connor - I Love What We Do