AM Gold 2024

I would never be so bold as to declare a list of the best albums of a given year. More music now comes out in a day than used to get released in a full year; with a field that large, it’s an act of hubris to speak with any confidence about objective standings and impartial rankings.

Instead, this is just a list of 100 101 albums that made their way to The AM in 2024 that are worth a listen if you enjoy the show’s mix of off-beat easy listening. Hosting the show is a great way to force myself to listen to as much new music as I can—but it also means I tend to listen for a particular mood, namely songs that sound good as you’re waking up on a Monday morning. That means this list gravitates heavily towards that vibe, so if you’re looking for abrasive and energetic tracks, this list isn’t that, by and large.

For the first time in many a year, the albums aren’t listed alphabetically—it’s an honest-to-goodness countdown. There are so many lists out there that it felt unfair to throw another 100 albums at you without at least some effort to help you pick where to put your attention. That said, I still fully believe music isn’t a competition and this ranking should be taken with a grain of salt. Ask me tomorrow and I might end up with a very different order; the fine gradations are arbitrary, and even the broad sweeps are a matter of mood as much as anything.

Skim through it in order from #100-#1* or just throw the playlist below on shuffle—but do make a point of checking these albums out. And an honorable mention goes to The Cure’s three-hour concert video of Songs of a Lost World and classic songs; the album is solid, but I think it works significantly better in a live format, and kudos to them for releasing such an epic performance free on YouTube.

*The Spotify playlist is missing about five tracks that weren’t in their system. All albums below link to the relevant Bandcamp page if it was available, or to Spotify if not.

100. Tomo Katsurada – Dream of the Egg

Recommended if you like (RIYL): Kikagaku Moyo, homemade psychedelia, eggs

99. Hélène Vogelsinger – Ethereal Dissolution

RIYL: Cascading modular synths, unexpected harmonies, and overwhelming sonic textures

98. Trees Speak – TimeFold

RIYL: Tangerine dreams and concise kosmische explorations

97. The Sorcerers – I Too Am a Stranger

RIYL: Upbeat Ethiojazz by way of northern England

96. Loula Yorke – speak, thou vast and venerable head

RIYL: Droning downtempo compositions, atmospheric field recordings

95. Ivan the Tolerable – Time is a Grave

RIYL: Haunted home-made psych-jazz

94. Drum & Lace – Onda

RIYL: Hypnotic ambient beats, winter landscapes

93. Church Chords – elvis, he was Schlager

RIYL: Experimental pop for weirdos and jazz heads

92. Ariel Kalma, Jeremiah Chiu & Marta Sofia Honer – The Closest Thing to Silence

RIYL: Inner journies and meditative moods

91. Lynn Avery, Cole Poulice – Phantasy & Reality

RIYL: Patient, spacious ambient jazz

90. Osmanthus – Between Seasons

RIYL: Intermingling neo-classical and experimental electronic impulses

89. Tristan De Liege – Fields

RIYL: Intricate but hazy downtempo electronics

88. Temporal Waves – Temporal Waves

RIYL: Tabla, synthwave, psychedelia, and grandeur

87. Group Listening – Walks

RIYL: Long walks through the countryside

86. Hollie Kenniff – For Forever

RIYL: Patient, melodic ambient sounds, slow builds, reverb

85. Warrington Runcorn New Town Development Plan – Your Community Hub

RIYL: Municipal planning, analog synths, ridiculous band names, ’70s sci-fi

84. Seahawks – Time Enough for Love

RIYL: New age soundscapes, gentle pulsing beats

83. Clinic Stars – Only Hinting

RIYL: The gauzest of dream-pop sounds

82. Mark McGuire – Anhedonia

RIYL: Emeralds (the band), looping guitar lines

81. Charbonneau / Amato – Enflammer le désert (OST)

RIYL: Melodic synths and vast expanses

80. The Hologram People – Isola Dei Morti Viventi

RIYL: Italian horror soundtracks, library grooves

79. Jane Weaver – Love in Constant Spectacle

RIYL: World-weary psych pop that still manages to shimmer

78. Dean McPhee – Astral Gold

RIYL: Acoustic explorations of distant galaxies

77. Miyauchi Yuri – Beta 2

RIYL: Blissfully glitchy Japanese electronics

76. p:ano – ba ba ba

RIYL: Nick Krgovich, Kellarisa, contemplative indie pop

75. Yasmin Williams – Acadia

RIYL: Joyfully melodic fingerpicked guitar

74. Jahari Massamba Unit – YHWH is LOVE

RIYL: Trippy instrumentals, Karriem Riggins, Madlib

73. Bananagun – Why is the Colour of the Sky

RIYL: Sun-baked (and otherwise-baked) psychedelia

72. Circles Around the Sun, Mikaela Davis – After Sunrise

RIYL: Harps, disco, basking in the afterglow

71. Jilk – Soft in Shape and Meaning

RIYL: Post-rock improvizations and experimental collectives

70. Retep Folo & Dorothy Moskowitz – The Afterlife Album

RIYL: Outsider electronics, ’60s psychedelia, hauntology more broadly, great cover art

69. Hawksmoor – Oneironautics

RIYL: German art-rock from decades past, Robert Fripp, feeling a little pretentious

68. Dissolve in Sepia – Spaciousness

RIYL: Jazzy genre-fluid downtempo compositions

67. Ana Butterss – Mighty Vertebrate

RIYL: Groove-based experimental music, Jeff Parker, the future of jazz

66. Molly Lewis – On the Lips

RIYL: Whistling, easy listening, exotica, more whistling

65. SHOLTO – Letting Go of Forever

RIYL: 60’s library grooves, ’70s movie soundtracks, 2000s chillout music

64. Big Brave – A Chaos of Flowers

RIYL: Folk music written by thunderclouds

63. Misha Panfilov – Frutaria Electrónica


RIYL: The very cheesiest synth sounds, getting lost in whorls and eddies of melody

62. Polypores – Unlimited Lives

RIYL: Self-contained sonic universes coaxed from modular synths

61. Beak> – >>>>

RIYL: Haunted folk, the gentler side of krautrock, Portishead, pervasive eerieness

60. Fourtet – Three

RIYL: Anything Keiran Hebden has done in the last 20 years

59. Godspeed You! Black Emperor – No Title as of 13 February 2024 28,340 Dead

RIYL: Slow builds, catharsis, walls of noise

58. Daisy Rickman – Howl

RIYL: Spooky psych-folk, Nico, drones and jangles

57. Einstürzende Neubauten – Rampen (apm: alien pop music)

RIYL: Subtle melodies, balancing abrasion and beauty, pop music made by aliens

56. Jon Hopkins – RITUAL

RIYL: Patience, subtlety, guided journies through altered states

55. Von Spar, Eiko Ishibashi – Album I

RIYL: Contemporary Japanese movie soundtracks, German art-rock, experimental sounds

54. Badbadnotgood – Mid:Spiral

RIYL: Instrumental jazz, neo-soul, soundtrack jazz, hearing people mellow out a bit

53. Erki Pärnoja – Rumba

RIYL: Playful Estonian instrumentals, tasteful little guitar licks, avoiding being too flashy

52. Unessential Oils – Unessential Oils

RIYL: Plants & Animals, Tropicalia, Canadian indie pop

51. Bibi Club – Feu de garde

RIYL: Jangling guitars, bilingual vocals, spritely energy

50. Dummy – Free Energy

RIYL: Transient random noise bursts, drone-pop

49. Jon McKiel – Hex

RIYL: East Coast Canadian indie-pop experimentalism

48. Andre Ethier – Cold Spaghetti

RIYL: Subdued, observational singer-songwriters

47. Various Artists – TRANSA

RIYL: An expansive and affirmational exploration of transition

46. maya ongaku – Electronic Phantoms

RIYL: The softer side of Japanese psychedelia

45. Luka Kuplowsky – How Can I Possibly Sleep When There Is Music?

RIYL: Poetry, Sandro Perri, Bohemianism, revelling in beauty but in a fairly chill way

44. Psychic Temple – Doggie Paddlin’ Thru the Cosmic Conscousness

RIYL: The most cosmic of cosmic American music, subdued space-country jams

43. Ethnic Heritage Ensemble – Open Me, A Higher Consciousness of Sound and Spirit

RIYL: 50-year-old jazz collectives trying cello, viola, and violin on for size

42. Nala Sinephro – Endlessness

RIYL: Dissolving the boundaries between jazz, neo-classical, ambient, and electronic

41. BASIC – This Is BASIC

RIYL: The Durutti Column, Chris Forsyth, sideways approaches to art-rock instrumentals

40. Peel Dream Magazine – Rose Main Reading Room

RIYL: Breezy, unpretentious bedroom pop

39. Laurent Dury – Organic Minimalism

RIYL: TV soundtracks, library music, contemporary classical sounds

38. Scions – To Cry Out in the Wilderness

RIYL: Experimental, affirmational, confrontational art-rock

37. OHMA – On Loving Earth

RIYL: Open-hearted instrumental collaborations, acoustic guitar and flute

36. Jennifer Castle – Camelot

RIYL: ’70s folk, alt-country, impeccable songwriting

35. Earthen Sea – Recollection

RIYL: A downbeat, dubby, tribute to ECM jazz

34. The Smile – Cutouts

RIYL: Thom Yorke, Jonny Greenwood and Tom Skinner just living in the moment

33. Dialect – Atlas of Green

RIYL: Sonic sculptures and electroacoustic experiments

32. Project Gemini – Colours & Light

RIYL: Funky psychedelia, deep soundtrack grooves, haunted forests

31. Bernardino Femminielli – Opéra Bouffe

RIYL: Serge Gainsbourg, melodrama, indulgence

30. Memorials – Memorial Waterslides

RIYL: Electrolane, Wire, art-rock excellence

29. Jessica Pratt – Here In the Pitch

RIYL: “spectral ’60s pop, Hollywood psychedelia and bossa nova” (because the bio says it best)

28. Eric Chenaux Trio – Delights of My Life

RIYL: Lost jazz standards flipped inside out

27. Zachary Gray – Suburbia EP

RIYL: East-coast IDM, headphone beats, wistfulness in musical form

26. Bilal Nasser – How Can We Say Nothing

RIYL: Post-classical guitar, shoegaze, tension, beauty and catharsis

25. Ayal Senior – Ora

RIYL: Psych-folk instrumentals, desert soundscapes, tasteful prog overtones

24. Beth Gibbons – Lives Outgrown

RIYL: Portishead without the trip-hop, melancholy folk, realizing you’re aging and should probably accept it

23. Elori Saxl – Earth Focus OST

RIYL: PBS, high-concept jazz, erasing the lines between nature and architecture

22. The Soundcarriers – Through Other Reflections

RIYL: Impeccable throwback psych-pop, trippy harmonies, bands that deserve more attention

21. Nick Schofield – Ambient Ensemble

RIYL: Ambient ensembles, electroacoustic collaborations, feeling at peace with your surroundings

20. Buildings and Food – Echo the Field

RIYL: Hope, warmth, and comfort conveyed through buzzing synths and ASMR beats

19. Geotic – The Anchorite

RIYL: Baths, Bibio, tape hiss, surprising moments of distorted bliss

18. Shabaka – Perceive Its Beauty, Acknowledge Its Grace

RIYL: Beauty, grace, ambient jazz, woodwinds, Moses Sumney, Laraaji, breathing

17. Fuubutsushi – Meridians

RIYL: Subtle, meditative jazz and post-rock with the occassional melodromatic flourish

16. Sam Wilson – Wintertides

RIYL: Intricate instrumental folk-jazz, an unusual blend of invention and accessibility

15.5. Loving – Any Light

(.5 because I missed this on the initial draft and that’s unforgiveable)

RIYL: Classic AM radio, Jungian psychology, pitch-perfect folk-rock

15. Organic Pulse Ensemble – Zither Suite

RIYL: Can’t think of anything clever because I don’t understand how it’s possible for one musician to singlehandly make a jazz album that feels this multifaceted

14. ROY – Spoons for the World

RIYL: Scott Walker, Lee Hazlewood, deep voices singing cosmic country

13. Andrew Wasylyk, Tommy Perman – Ash Grey and the Gull Glides On

RIYL: Perfect pairings, jazz-folk-electronic fusions, subtle details, chanted vocals, small doses of Arab Strap

12. Tomin – A Willed and Conscious Balance

RIYL: The International Anthem version of large-ensemble jazz, featuring strings and horns aplenty

11. Lau Ro – Cabana

RIYL: Wax Machine, MPB, soft psychedelia, instrospection

10. SW Hedrick – Devotional Drift Vol. 1

RIYL: Metal guitarists embracing transcendental rhythms and meditative compositions

9. Hiro Ama – Music for Peace and Harmony

RIYL: Japanese synthesizers, romantic ideals, gentle reassurances

8. Cindy Lee – Diamond Jubilee

RIYL: Singular visions, impeccable musicianship, girl group pop, subversive instincts, the sound of letting people in, at least just a little

7. Caméra – Caméra

RIYL: Slowing down, getting playful, making music for the joy of it

6. Peggy Lee & Cole Schmidt – Forever Stories Of: Moving Parties

RIYL: Unusually expansive cello and guitar-led compositions pulling from post-rock, experimental jazz, ’70s prog and beyond

5. SiP – Leos Ultras

RIYL: Fourth-world ditties that radiate warmth, wisdom and joy

4. Tristan Arp – a pool, a portal

RIYL: Closing your eyes, opening your ears, and getting lost in strange new world

3. Hypnodrone Ensemble – The Problem Is In The Sender – Do Not Tamper With The Receiver

RIYL: Waves of sound enveloping you until the rest of the world just disappears

2. Fabiano do Nascimento, Sam Gendel – The Room

RIYL: The year’s purest expression of melody, acoustic artists in absolute alignment

1. Ezra Feinberg – Soft Power

RIYL: Beauty in simplicity, sipping drinks from the Penguin Cafe, feeling like maybe it’s going to be ok

Best Albums of 2024 (So Far)

A selection of the finest ambient, experimental, dream pop, and otherwise blissful releases from Jan-June 2024. One song each from most of these (minus three) are in this Spotify playlist and this Tidal playlist, or listen to the albums in their entirety with the links below.

Ariel Kalma, Jeremiah Chiu & Marta Sofia Honer – The Closest Thing to Silence (Feb. 2, 2024)

A lush blending of electronics and woodwinds, capturing the best of both strands of the current ambient jazz boom. Its improvised tracks are inquisitive, intelligent, grounded, and grounding.

Ayal Senior – Ora (June 19, 2024)

Invigorating instrumental psych-folk—lovely melodies anchored by Senior’s resonant 12-string guitar. Meandering without sacrificing momentum, like a river flowing confidently to the sea.

Beak> – >>>> (May 28, 2024)

More of Beak> doing what they do best, exploring the haunted side of kosmische and post-rock. Unsurprisingly for a Portishead spinoff (though it’s a well-established project in its own right), this is perfect autumn music—maybe set it aside until then.

Beth Gibbons – Lives Outgrown (May 17, 2024)

Another Portishead-related project. Shocking that former frontwoman Gibbons waited until 2024 to make her solo debut (2002’s brilliant Out of Season almost counts, but was still a collaboration with Rustin Mann). Less shocking that it’s also a fantastic piece of work, a moody meditation on life and loss. “Floating on a Moment” even manages to make a children’s choir effective, no small feat.

Bibi Club – Feu de garde (May 10, 2024)

Jangling pop and post-punk sung in both official languages. Strongest in its most upbeat moments (see “Le feu” or “Reu du Repos”), but the moodier moments work well, too.

Big Brave – A Chaos of Flowers (April 19, 2024)

Like folk songs played on thunderclouds—doom-laden dirges riding some of the crunchiest distortion you’ll hear this year.

Bilal Nasser – How Can We Say Nothing (February 15, 2024)

An inspired fusion of classical guitar, shoegaze atmospherics, and post-rock pacing, and a haunting statement from the Palistinean-Canadian composer.

Buildings and Food – Echo the Field (May 10, 2024)

Stripped down compositions from Toronto’s Jen K. Wilson that reveal more with every spin. Inspired by the expanse of the Mojave and just as easy to get lost in.

Caméra – Caméra (April 5, 2024)

A fantastic debut from this Montreal trio that’s very much flying under the radar. Gently cinematic sounds that never fail to surprise; a Quebec post-rock spin on Yann Tiersen, or a more sedate take on Torngat’s early 2000s explorations. Either way, this one’s a stunner.

Cindy Lee – Diamond Jubilee (March 30, 2024)

Say what you will about the release strategy and the hype, this double-album from former Women singer Pat Flegel deserves all the acclaim its received. The first Cindy Lee album that doesn’t push listeners away with walls of confrontational distortion; just haunted pop bliss from a spectral ’60s girl-group.

Circles Around the Sun and Mikaela Davis – After Sunrise (April 5, 2024)

Speaking of pop bliss, who would’ve thought disco cosmonauts and expressive harp would sound this great together? Tailor-made for lounging beachside without a care in the world.

Daisy Rickman – Howl (March 20, 2024)

Nico is the lazy comparison, but it’s not like it isn’t apt. Droning folk compositions and icy-cool and strikingly deep vocals; you could easily convince me that Rickman has tapped into some deep well of earth-magic.

Dana Gavanski – Late Slap (April 5, 2024)

A bit more of a pop effort, but still every bit as quirky and inventive as anything she’s released—the melodies are always unconventional and accessible all at once.

David Allred – Apocalypse Rose (June 20, 2024)

Gentle and brief neoclassical compositions, slow, melodic, and a little melancholy. Not an attention-grabber, but when the right mood strikes, it’s an easy one to get lost in.

Dean McPhee – Astral Gold (February 16, 2024)

Solo guitar looped, echoed and reverberated until it conjures the cosmos. Influenced by kosmische, dub, and experimental electronics, Astral Gold drifts slowly and inevitably, a score to distant, unfathomable clouds of interstellar dust.

Eric Chenaux Trio – Delights of My Life (May 31, 2024)

Chenaux’s ongoing collaborations with Ryan Driver are never less than gorgeous, and the first release from this new trio (rounded out by percussionist Phillipe Melanson) is as lovely as anything in his rich catalogue. Chenaux’s voice is in top form, and no effects can hide the beauty of these guitar melodies. Lounge music from an alternate dimension.

Ethnic Heritage Ensemble – Open Me, A Higher Consciousness of Sound and Spirit (March 8, 2024)

50 years on, Kahil El’Zabar’s Ethic Heritage Ensemble is still adding new dimensions to its sound. Open Me adds cello, violin, and viola to the mix, and the gritty textures are hypnotic. The opening spin on Miles Davis’ “All Blues” and the pulsing take on the traditional “The Whole World” are highlights among a very solid collection of spiritual, consciousness-expanding jazz.

Ezra Feinberg – Soft Power (May 31, 2024)

East coast ambient from former Citay member (and current psychoanalyst) Ezra Feinberg, who benefits from some exceptional collaborators. Mary Lattimore lends her always-welcome harp to closing track “Get Some Rest,” Jefre Cantu-Ledesma adds flutters of synth to “Pose Beams” (along with Robbie Lee’s expressive piano); each song feels more discovered than written, open to possibilities and inviting to the listener.

Fabiano do Nascimento, Sam Gendel – The Room (January 26, 2024)

An instant favourite from the first strums of album opener “Foi Boto.” do Nascimento’s seven-string guitar is exceptional but never showy, prompting Gendel to indulge in his most melodic impulses. Nothing more than guitar and saxophone, but easily among the most captivating releases of 2024.

Fuubutsushi – Meridians (June 27, 2024)

The expectations set by Fuubutsushi’s fantastic four-part tribute to the seasons, released in 2020 and 2021, can’t have been easy to manage. That project was a band discovering itself—the project didn’t even have a name when the first part was released—whereas Meridians is by necessity a fleshing out of and reaction to those first releases. Good news: Meridians is absolutely a worthy successor to the ambient-jazz torch, or post-rock, or whatever you might want to call a blend of lush violin, field recordings, exploratory percussion, and wandering woodwinds.

Geotic – The Anchorite (February 21, 2024)

Will Wiesenfeld’s latest conjures up early Bibio in all the best ways, with fingerpicked guitars, heavy reverb, and plenty of tape hiss evoking an old cassette dug up from the forest humus. That is, until “The Lime of Stars” unleashes the distortion and reaches for a droning cosmic crescendo.

Group Listening – Walks (May 10, 2024)

I would’ve been quite content with Group Listening sticking to their formula of covering cult classics on clarinet and piano, but I can’t begrudge them branching out into original compositions. Especially when it keeps the playfulness of the previous approach while expanding the sonic pallette as expertly as they do here.

Hochzeitskapelle – We Dance EP (March 22, 2024)

Four covers—Pavement, Yo La Tengo, Low, and German pop band Wir Sind Helden—transformed into Hochzeitskapelle’s trademark autumnal “Rumpelljazz” might seem a bit slight compared to some of the albums on this list, but after the expanse of last year’s double-album The Orchestra in the Sky, the brevity is understandable. And regardless of the length, as always with Hochzeitskapelle, the mood is magic.

Ivan the Tolerable – Time is a Grave (June 7, 2024)

Time is a Grave is Ivan the Tolerable (aka Oli Heffernan)’s sixth release of 2024 (with another due out in a few days as I write this), which might make you assume it’s tossed off, but the strange thing is he’s as consistent as he is prolific. Jammy, psychedelic jazz, slightly spooky with no shortage of musical ideas.

Jahari Massamba Unit – YHWH is LOVE (March 1, 2024)

Karriem Riggins and Madlib reteam after 2020’s Pardon My French for an album of hip-hop-influenced spiritual jazz. Given those names and those genres, you probably already know if you’re sold. Deep grooves and good vibes.

Jeffrey Silverstein – Roseway EP (June 14, 2024)

Silverstein’s sound has evolved quite a bit since 2020’s You Become the Mountain, but the basic gist—a fusion of country boogie and new age atmosphere—is still solidly in place. The boogie is at the forefront here, with Akron/Family drummer Dana Buoy providing the backbone, and Connor Gallaher’s pedal steel ramping up the twang.

Jessica Pratt – Here in the Pitch (May 3, 2024)

Classic pop songcraft that pulls from the sounds of the ’60s (or earlier), but never succumbing to nostalgia—Pratt may have tapped into an older vein, but she isn’t pretending the past 50 years of musical history didn’t happen. Haunting, resilient, and unplaceably odd.

Jon McKiel – Hex (May 3, 2024)

Oddball psychedelia from New Brunswick. McKiel and collaborator Jay Crocker both know how to write pop tunes and how to subvert them. Inspired by ’60s-’70s singer songwriters (see the Terry Jacks cover or the Everley-aping “Everlee”), but through a filter of East Coast experimentation.

Kilometre Club – An Alphabet of Distance (June 1, 2024)

Twenty-six ambient collaborations, from “Airliner” (with Holly Kenniff) to “Zone of Harmony” (with Sun Rain), each artist adding their own unique textures to Kilometre Club’s droning ambiance.

Lau Ro – Cabana (May 31, 2024)

Wax Machine’s Lau Ro explores their Brazilian roots on their solo debut. The results are heavy on atmosphere (tape hiss and field recordings are par for the course), but also airy and melodic, intimate and experimental.

Los Days – Dusty Dreams (May 31, 2024)

Easygoing easy-listening instrumentals from Tommy Guerrero & Josh Lippi. Surf, psych, and breezy tropicalia baked under the desert sun.

Loving – Any Light (February 9, 2024)

Laurel Canyon vibes via Canada’s West Coast, with lyrics inspired by Jungian insights and melodies that rarely rise above a whisper, because they don’t need to.

Luka Kuplowsky – How Can I Possibly Sleep When There Is Music (May 31, 2024)

It’s hard not to fixate on the breezy title track and its chief sentiment, but the 24 tracks here cover a lot of ground. Poetry set to music, and occassionally as indulgent as that surely sounds, but even if it inspires the occassional eye-roll, it inspires bliss much more often.

Magic Fig – Magic Fig (May 17, 2024)

An excellent distillation of the best parts of psych, Canterbury, pop-prog, and jangle-pop, reconfiguring familiar elements into a sunny summer soundtrack.

Molly Lewis – On the Lips (February 16, 2024)

The queen of contemporary exotica makes it all seem so effortless. Ten songs anchored by Lewis’ immaculate whistle, this time adding a few more contemporary sounds to the mix, still straddling the line between kitsch and classic in all the right ways.

Nick Schofield – Ambient Ensemble (February 9, 2024)

With Ambient Ensemble, Schofield moves gracefully from synth soundscapes to chamber music. Collaboration suits him—the clarinet flutters and violin swells add a vibrancy that’s often missing from solo ambient work.

OHMA – On Loving Earth (April 22, 2024)

Abandoning the synths they used so effectively on 2022’s Between All Things, OHMA’s Mia Garcia and Hailey Niswanger stick to organic sounds for On Loving Earth. The narrower musical focus brings the melodies to the forefront, lilting and lovely, paying tribute to the beauty of nature.

Organic Pulse Ensemble – Zither Suite (January 5, 2024)

Despite the name, OPE is actually one man, Gustav Horneij, layering sax, flute, bass, and zither into spiritual jazz bliss in an apartment outside Gothenberg. How Zither Suite captures the freewheeling spirit of improv so perfectly without an actual ensemble is hard to imagine, but the results speak for themselves.

Osmanthus – Between Seasons (January 30, 2024)

Not the Toronto alt-rock band, the Calgary collaboration between ambient synth maestro Valiska and violinist Laura Reid. Improvised sessions reworked digitally, sometimes subtly and other times more obviously; it’s at its most engrossing in the longer compositions, but the ear for unique textures is always there.

Project Gemini – Colours & Lights (April 5, 2024)

2022’s The Children of Scorpio was a solid enough debut, but Colours & Lights ups the ante in every respect. Acid-folk grooves, psychedelic vocals, and folk-horror vibes—it’s a perfect Halloween album without being so on-the-nose that you couldn’t play it year round.

Psychic Temple – Doggie Paddlin’ Thru the Cosmic Consciousness (May 31, 2024)

You never quite know what you’ll get with Psychic Temple—a 15-minute spooky-jazz cover of Black Sabbath? 20 minute cosmic-synth experiments?—but the surprise with the ninth and possibly final Psychic Temple album is how straightforward it is. Just laid-back cosmic country grooves and chooglin’ guitars, backyard music for semi-stoned summer days (even for those of us who don’t partake in anything stronger than music).

Retep Folo & Dorothy Moskowitz – The Afterlife Album (March 1, 2024)

Hauntological audio collage of the sort you’d expect from Ghost Box recordings or maybe Broadcast, cobbling together bits of psychedelica, Mort Garson synthscapes, and otherworldy exotica. Co-creator Moskowitz was in ’60s psych act United States of America, and apparently the 60 years since that psychedelic moment has done nothing to dim her musical adventurousness.

ROY – Spoons for the World (April 19, 2024)

ROY’s retro-minded psych-glam never quite worked for me, but his re-emergence as a country-tinged Scott Walker/more melancholy Lee Hazelwood is nothing short of stunning. Maybe it’s another schtick, but when the songwriting is this impeccable, who really cares?

Sam Wilson – Wintertides (April 5, 2024)

Folk-influenced instrumental jazz, taking inspiration from nature in its cyclical compositions. For an album inspired by winter, it’s surprisingly warm to my ears; maybe this is winter viewed through a window from inside a warm cabin, admiring the iciness outside but feeling cozier from the contrast.

Shabaka – Perceive Its Beauty, Acknowledge Its Grace (April 12, 2024)

2022’s sparse Afrikan Culture foreshadowed Shabaka’s decision to put away his saxophone (sorry Sons of Kemet and Comet is Coming fans) in favour of flute, clarinet, and other, more obscure winds. Shabaka’s latest builds on that foundation but enlists others to expand the sound, with Moses Sumney, Saul Williams, Laaraji, and Andre 3000 among the talented many here. Gentle, varied, and highly rewarding.

Shabason, Krgovich, Sage – Shabason, Krgovich, Sage (April 5, 2024)

The third partnering of Shabason & Krgovich adds M. Sage’s pastoral electronics to the mix, and if it’s not exactly a departure from the past two releases, it’s still a welcome variation. Krgovich’s observational lyrics are insightful as ever, consistently elevating the everyday into the borderline-transcendent.

Temporal Waves – Temporal Waves (April 12, 2024)

Tabla isn’t typically associated with sci-fi futurescapes, but Temporal Waves debut makes it sound like a natural fit. A retrofuturist vision, rich with synthwave influences and the occasional psychedelic solo from Besnard Lakes’ Jace Lacek, who also produced.

The Sorcerers – I Too Am a Stranger (February 9, 2024)

Deeply groovy stuff, the kind of sound you sort of wish was from a recently unearthed slab of ’70s vinyl instead of three lads from Leeds indulging in Ethio-jazz adventures, but beggars can’t be choosers.

Unessential Oils – Unessential Oils (May 31, 2024)

Easily my favourite release from Warren Spicer since Plants & Animals debuted with With/Avec almost 20 years ago. It embraces a loose jazziness that has always suited Spicer’s songwriting, with elements of folk and Tropicalia keeping the sounds nice and varied.

Yu Ching – The Crystal Hum (April 26, 2024)

No surprise that Yu Ching shares a label with the Space Lady and Ela Orleans—all three embrace idiosyncratic approaches to lo-fi synth songwriting. Like Orleans, Yuching Huang prefers the oblique and mysterious to anything like an obvious hook. It’s unearthly, but still oddly ear-catching, unexpected and inviting at the same time.