Here are our all of our favorite albums of 2025. This is the year end review, all in one place.
Below are our picks for RtBE's favorite albums of the year. It starts with our honorable mentions then moves into our top ten albums of the year. There is a short blurb about the album and a song from it, click on the title to read our full review of the selected records. The focus here is on full albums, not singles, but long playing releases you can slap on and listen to all the way through.
We also took some time to discuss our favorite album artwork, our favorite archive/live album releases and favorite live shows from the year if you are interested.
Thanks for reading. Until next year....
Honorable Mentions:
The 22nd entry into the Jazz Is Dead series is a winner. The Afrobeat legend Taylor and his son Henry along with Younge Muhammad and everyone involved put out a really cool listen. The cool upbeat, brief for Afrobeat, offerings work as the legendary Taylor at 89 still can put out some inspiring music.
The partnership between Ale Hop (Peruvian electronic musician and researcher Alejandra Cárdena) and Congolese guitarist Titi Bakorta is a very interesting mix of cultures, sounds and styles as the music bounces, shakes and shimmies down a new path of Peruvian/African rhythms. Mapambazuko is a wild ride and one very much worth taking.
On Fish's recent albums, Faster and Kill or Be Kind, as well as her duet album with Jesse Dayton, Death Wish Blues, Fish pushed her sound towards more modern pop flourishes with neon tinged buzzing and hip-hop collabs. While the pop sheen is not completely removed from Paper Doll, it is incredibly toned down as Fish focuses on classic rock touch points and hill country blues. In a way this is a retro record for Fish, returning more to her blues/rock roots with confidence.
As the title suggests, the 89 year old legend Buddy Guy has more blues to give on his fine new album Ain't Done With the Blues. Guy sounds strong on both guitar and vocals as he hooks up with a host of friends, but this is not a duet album, Guy commands the stage.
Flashes of Paul Simon, John Mellancamp and Billy Joel are sprinkled over Dunne's Clams Casino. That connection can be felt in Brian Dunne's pop sensibilities, a throwback to when everyone sang the same songs off the radio. Even in these splintered times Clams Casino works with solid sounds, questioning lyrics and an urgent author.

























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