CAPC’s Favourite Music of 2024

All through December and January, the CAPC group has compiled an inventory of our favourite popular culture artifacts from the earlier yr. In contrast to most year-end lists, we don’t declare that these are the “finest.” Reasonably, these are the issues that introduced us essentially the most pleasure and satisfaction within the final 12 months.
For 2024, our favourite music included goth icons, a hip-hop grasp, clever post-punk, Tay Tay, and extra.
Songs of a Misplaced World by The Treatment

When an iconic band returns after a years-long absence, there’s all the time that fearful query: What in the event that they’ve misplaced no matter it was that made them so particular and beloved within the first place? Little question that was on the forefront of everybody’s thoughts when The Treatment—icons of goth and various music—introduced Songs of a Misplaced World, their first album in fourteen years. Previous albums like 2008’s 4:13 Dream and 2004’s self-titled album had their moments, however they had been largely hit-or-miss affairs, and a far cry the band’s most celebrated work, like 1989’s Disintegration.
However when The Treatment launched the album’s first single, a sprawling six-minute music titled “Alone,” there was a collective sigh of aid. Stuffed with dirge-like synths, moody guitars, and Robert Smith crying out “That is the tip of each music that we sing/The hearth burned out to ash/And the celebs grown dim with tears,” it turned out to be the music that Treatment followers had been ready for all this time.
Songs of a Misplaced World finds Smith ruminating on grief and loss. The existential angst that drove such goth classics as 1982’s Pornography continues to be current, however tempered with maturity and expertise. “I Can By no means Say Goodbye” is a heart-wrenching ballad concerning the demise of Smith’s brother and “And Nothing Is Eternally” was impressed by a deathbed promise. In the meantime, epic nearer “Endsong” attracts on Smith’s recollections of watching the Apollo moon landings, and laments the lack of that innocence.
Smith is presently in his mid-60s. His famously tousled hair is thinning and his trademark make-up seems slightly extra ridiculous on his wrinkled face. However, his voice stays as distinctive and highly effective as ever, and his band’s music continues to be simply as stirring and evocative—and gloomy!—because it was again within the “glory days.”
—Jason Morehead
GNX by Kendrick Lamar

It’s onerous to think about how Kendrick Lamar may’ve had a greater 2024. He demolished Drake in a multi-song beef saga, landed the halftime gig for the 2025 Tremendous Bowl, and dropped the shock album GNX that captured the entire web’s consideration. We’ll doubtless look again at 2024 as the height of his run as hip-hop’s brightest star and the world’s most revered—and feared—rapper.
Having the proverbial championship belt doesn’t matter a lot except the music delivers, although. That’s the place GNX succeeds, giving listeners slices of the sprawling and infrequently conflicting persona that folks have come to like, showcasing as soon as extra that Lamar certainly incorporates multitudes. “Squabble Up” is for followers longing for the West Coast bounce of his vicious and viral Drake diss, “Not Like Us.” For individuals who love Kendrick at his most dense and complicated, spinning tales and wordplay that calls for shut consideration, there’s “Reincarnated” and “Gloria.” There’s even some deep inside baseball on his departure from TDE on the somber “The Coronary heart pt 6.”
Past all this, the album’s most fascinating and notable facet is that regardless of Kendrick clearly holding rap’s high slot, GNX‘s occasion vibes are background noise to his continued tortured wrestling along with his duty as a group chief and his craving for a deep non secular life. Success and vanquishing one’s rap foes doesn’t clear up all; it merely makes the existential extra urgent. One of the best instance is the back-half of “Reincarnated,” an homage to Tupac Shakur, one by which Kendrick imitates Shakur’s movement and samples his ’90s music “Made Niggas.” Lamar leverages the music for a second of non secular interrogation, one thing Christians may register as not too far faraway from St Ignatius’s examen. Lamar turns spiritually introspective, launching right into a dialogue along with his father, readily understood as heavenly, organic, or each: “Father, did I lastly get it proper? Every little thing I did was selfless.”
The examen reveals Lamar has been extra sinner than saint, regardless of placing on for his group. Right here, GNX teaches us that gaining the world solely complicates issues of the soul. Past the chart toppers, that is the actual present GNX affords to discerning listeners keen to think about Lamar’s non secular wrestling even atop the mountain of stardom.
—Claude Atcho
Like Unto Lambs by Luxurious

Cease me when you heard this rock n’ roll story earlier than. A younger band begins producing a ton of buzz for his or her intense sound, loopy stage presence, and controversial picture. Then, simply as they’re about to interrupt large, they get in a horrific automotive accident that sidelines their music profession. Subsequently, three of the members develop into Orthodox clergymen and now, almost thirty years after that fateful accident, they’re making a few of the finest music of their profession.
That’s the story of Luxurious, and it’s a doozy. (If you wish to know extra, I extremely suggest watching the Parallel Love documentary, which is presently streaming at no cost on Tubi.)
The self-released Like Unto Lambs continues the band’s raucous-yet-melodic tackle post-punk (assume Fugazi meets The Smiths meets Radiohead), with a triple guitar assault and punishing rhythm part. After which there’s frontman Lee Bozeman, a slender bespectacled determine (and a type of aforementioned clergymen) with a voice like Morrissey and lyrics that plumb the depths of human brokenness and depravity in addition to the heights of divine grace and sovereignty.
Attributable to their diverging paths, the 5 members of Luxurious don’t document and launch music all that always—their earlier album, the additionally wonderful Trophies, was launched again in 2015—so once they do launch a brand new album, it’s an occasion. And it’s well worth the wait.
—Jason Morehead
Reside in Amarillo, Texas by Hayden Pedigo

“After I’m on the street, I inform people who Amarillo is a flat, windy, scorching, chilly, brutal, and considerably ugly place to lots of people. However I say, I believe Amarillo is sort of a lovely place. The pauses in my music, the rationale they’re there may be in Amarillo the flat plains that go on perpetually and ever, they’ve all the time been refreshing to me. They really feel like an enormous, lengthy pause.” So says Hayden Pedigo on his newest dwell document and it might be onerous to enhance on the sparse magnificence of those acoustic songs.
Like his beloved Amarillo, Pedigo’s music is punctuated by an understated magnificence that’s each meditative and mournful. This document is all of the extra outstanding for being dwell. Songs with this a lot subtlety often don’t combine properly with crowds, however there’s such a reverential silence from the viewers that the applause on the finish comes as a shock.
Lest you assume it’s only a post-production scrub, check out a few of the footage from Pedigo’s Instagram by which whole crowds sit down in scummy venues simply to let his music wash over them. If I see the person dwell, I’ll in all probability do the identical factor.
—Cameron McAllister
“Sizzling to Go!” by Chappel Roan

Chappell Roan was arguably essentially the most talked-about rising pop star of final yr. Though The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess dropped in September 2023, it really took off in April after she delivered a show-stopping set at Coachella—together with my private favourite observe, “Sizzling to Go!” The music grew to become a slow-burning hit, touchdown on Billboard’s Sizzling 100 3 times—in June, August, and October—earlier than peaking at No. 15. A staple of her dwell exhibits, “Sizzling to Go!” even made its manner into the Guts tour, the place Roan carried out it alongside Olivia Rodrigo.
Campy, enjoyable, and irresistibly danceable, “Sizzling to Go!” is the form of music that burrows into your mind—the second you hear it, you’re buzzing the lyrics and itching to study the dance. The music video completely captures Roan’s infectious vitality, that includes her instructing the routine to Springfield, MO locals, together with her personal grandparents. And that’s the magic of Chappell Roan—her music doesn’t simply make you need to dance; it makes on a regular basis moments really feel slightly brighter. For this mother, it even made commutes to work and faculty drop-off and pickup strains with the youngsters much more enjoyable in 2024. In some way, once you’re singing alongside to “Sizzling to Go!,” you’re feeling just a bit extra able to deal with regardless of the day throws at you.
—LuElla D’Amico
Lust for Gold by Starflyer 59

I’ve been a fan of Jason Martin and Starflyer 59 for 3 many years now, ever since I used to be captivated by the syrupy-thick shoegaze sounds of their 1994 self-titled debut album (generally known as Silver because of its monochromatic album artwork). For thirty years now, I’ve been following Martin’s music, with every new Starflyer 59 album a must-purchase.
Martin has all the time been vulnerable to nostalgia, even on his earliest albums. So it’s no shock that 2024’s Lust for Gold discovered him ruminating on outdated friendships (“1995”), youthful recollections (“YZ80”), and even the self-importance of a life spent pursuing wealth and luxury (“Lust for Gold”) in his cigarette-stained baritone.
However what makes Lust for Gold notably fulfilling for long-time followers like myself is how Martin consists of quite a few throwbacks to the heavy shoegaze of Starflyer 59’s early days. From the heavy riffage of “909” and to “Lust for Gold”‘s attractive surf riffs to the swirling suggestions of “My Lung,” it’s a delight to listen to these “traditional” sounds once more, and proof that generally, you actually can return once more.
—Jason Morehead
Taylor Swift’s “Eras” Tour

After I’m making dinner for the youngsters or driving my daughter to ballet, I typically pause earlier than placing on music and ask myself: What Period am I in in the present day? If work was tough, I’ll flip to Fame. If I’m feeling slightly dreamy, it’s Folklore. If I’ve had an amazing day and wish some further bounce in my step, I’ll placed on Fearless or Purple. And let’s not even speak concerning the temper that requires Midnights or The Tortured Poets Division.
Positive, you may name it primary—however in 2024, Taylor Swift’s “Eras” Tour made historical past, surpassing $2 billion in income and turning into the highest-grossing live performance tour of all time. Clearly, I wasn’t alone in mapping my feelings onto her discography. With 149 exhibits throughout 5 continents, the tour was greater than only a live performance—it was a world cultural occasion.
My 9-year-old daughter and I noticed it on the large display, and she or he’s nonetheless making friendship bracelets for anybody who will take one, encouraging all her Swiftie mates to Converse Now. Taylor Swift didn’t simply make music in 2024; she outlined the yr. From Eras dominating theaters to The Tortured Poets Division breaking information, she was the soundtrack to so a lot of our lives. And because the yr got here to an in depth, one factor was sure: in 2024, we had been all in our Taylor Swift Period.
—LuElla D’Amico
Solely God Was Above Us by Vampire Weekend

Solely God Was Above Us is a top-notch return to the heights of Vampire Weekend’s 2008 debut and 2013’s Trendy Vampires of the Metropolis, however the years have discovered the band rising weary, notably bored with all method of discordance and strife. To place it extra strongly, Vampire Weekend have struggle on their minds: “You don’t need to win this struggle / ‘Cuz you don’t need the peace” they cry out within the opening observe. And in “Gen-X Cops,” Ezra Koenig’s voice foregrounds reluctance: “Dodged the draft however can’t dodge the struggle.”
The band’s newest album considers jingoism and the softer imperialism of the educated elite, pugilists with actual energy and prep-school wannabes with one thing to show. The weariness feels earned (and, talking personally, resonant) in a world of dissension. But when the matters betray exhaustion, there’s no trace of it within the songcraft, which shows Vampire Weekend at their most electrifying, unifying their myriad influences into what could also be their strongest album but.
—Micah Rickard
“To the Flowers” by Whereas She Sleeps (Music Video)

Whereas She Sleeps’ “To the Flowers” has one of the best music video I’ve seen in years. I’ve listened to a whole lot of Whereas She Sleeps since my YouTube algorithm launched me to this music in early 2024 and most of their music is customary metallic/hardcore fare. However “To the Flowers” has a decidedly completely different sound. Its melodic parts improve the tougher ones, encompassing a spread of feelings the lyrics had been crafted to evoke.
That is the place the cinematic music video not solely elevates the music however turns into a standalone masterpiece. Custom says merely filming a band play devices generally is a music video, however when you’re going so as to add video to music, why not make it imply one thing? I’ve watched “To the Flowers” muted and, not surprisingly, it’s excellent as a self-encapsulated silent brief movie.
I received’t spoil the narrative, seen by means of non-sequential clips, however what the three stars (Anna Thornley, Robert Peach, Jill Welsh), director Sean Lengthy, and cinematographer/editor Arran McKenzie have crafted is nothing in need of breathtaking. A story of affection and loss, grieving and overcoming melancholy, I ask why I’ve put myself by means of the feelings of watching the video for the umpteenth time, but once more swallowing the lump in my throat. When you’re a glutton for simultaneous punishment and inspirational storytelling, expertise the video.
—Chris Fogle