2024 In Review (Also Cool's Top Albums)

 

Listen along with the official Sounds Cool 2024 playlist!

Available on YouTube and Spotify below.

2hollis - boy
Electroclash has merged with cloud rap, creating 2hollis, the bleach blonde “god boy.” Backed by his SoundCloud cult following, 2hollis gained exponential momentum opening for Ken Carson on tour earlier this year, and will be headlining his own tour in 2025. boy is as aggressive as it is tender, with almost ambient tracks like “you said my name for the first time,” contrasting with 2009-electroclash-pop style bangers like “two bad.” The album was also produced by 2hollis, and feels sonically unafraid – melding genres in a way that’s innovative without being obnoxious. 


Alix Fernz - Bizou (Mothland)

“On Bizou, Fernz leads us down a drainpipe into an unabashed, palpitating reverie of studded leather, troublemaking and lipstick-stained dive bar mirrors. Produced in the bedrooms of three different apartments, with vocals tracked on Fernz’s iPhone mic, Bizou fearlessly criss-crosses remnants of bratty 70s-punk with new wave romanticism in a blistering 32-minutes.” 

- Zoë Argiropulos-Hunter, From Bartender to Headliner: Montreal's Alix Fernz Turns Heads with Debut Album "Bizou" (Mothland), April 15th, 2024


Banggz - 4 THE BANGGERZ 

“The sophomore record of Nigerian-born, Ottawa-based Afro-rap vanguard Banggz has been on repeat since it dropped earlier [this year]. Aptly titled 4 THE BANGGERZ, the album delivers hit after hit along with a star-studded cast of featured performers, including City Fidelia, Asuquomo, and Jahmeema. 4 THE BANGGERZ sees Banggz ambitiously craft a ‘sonic escape,’ fusing West African rhythms, futuristic soundscapes and energetic anthems of resilience, identity and camaraderie.” 

- Zoë Argiropulos-Hunter - Also Cool’s Playlist Refresh, August 20th, 2024


Bladee - Cold Visions (Trash Island)

Evil music is so back. Ice king Bladee is leading the way with his confessionary crash-out album Cold Visions. The 30-track album rips into feelings of paranoia, feeling too old to be in the room, and self-isolation, featuring long-time collaborators including Yung Sherman, Yung Lean, Whitearmor, Thaiboy Digital, and Ecco2k. Lyrically, the album ranges from spiralling mantras (“One second in my bag”) to the kinds of things you tell yourself when you’re too high (“I’m normal / In the club dressed formal”). Overall, it’s an icy dive into Bladee’s mind, leaving drainers everywhere rejoicing.


Cecile Believe - Tender the Spark (ambient tweets / Supernature)

Cecile Believe is your favourite artist’s favourite artist, point blank. Tender the Spark is introspective and indulgent all at once, and has ushered in the recognition she deserves after years of innovation in the pop sphere. “The world didn’t even, but it feels like it’s gone now / Late stage self-portrait, last ride let’s kill it.” If “Blink Twice” is the invitation, “Ponytail” is a free fall dive into Cecile’s world.


Chanel Beads - Your Day Will Come (Jagjaguwar)

Lush, hopeful, and gorgeous, Chanel Beads offered Your Day Will Come into the world this year, and was met with mass appreciation for their mystic optimism. “You owe it to yourself, gotta believe in something else / Good people out of view / Soul to bear.” Everything from the reverb of their guitars to angelic vocal treatments feels like it came from another realm – reaching its hand out to try and touch the future. 


Cindy Lee - Diamond Jubilee (Realistik Studios)

Modestly released unto the masses in early spring, the staggering beauty of Cindy Lee’s Diamond Jubilee has incited a near-universal cotton candy trance. The creative aptitude of the artist otherwise known as Patrick Flegel has reverberated at different frequencies for the past two decades, but their vision for Diamond Jubilee falls perfectly into place. The record boasts a cinematic romanticism that is concurrently enlightened and instinctual. Flegel’s narrative unfurls with rigour (122 minutes, to be exact) – a psychedelic deer-legged odyssey through satin sheets and bleary dreams.


cumgirl8 - the 8th cumming (4AD)

With their anticipated debut record the 8th cumming, cumgirl8 channels their avant-garde spark into a satisfying collection. The group unabashedly delivers a searing industrial sound with the likes of “uti,” while flirting with softer territory through the dream-pop weightlessness of “girls don’t try.” Inspired by Siouxsie, Ladytron, et plus, cumgirl8 have penned the next chapter on feminist punk.


The Dare - What’s Wrong With New York? (Republic Records)

From dropping his gig as a substitute teacher to producing for Charli XCX, it's safe to say The Dare made an explosive entrance in 2024 with his debut long-player What’s Wrong With New York? While some thought the Dimes Square trickster on a mission to resuscitate indie sleaze wouldn’t stay relevant post-TikTok virality, the fresh-faced Harrison Patrick Smith remains plastered across tour posters and fashion outlets in his signature black suit and tie. Pumping out certified club hits for the sake of raunchy, hedonistic entertainment, The Dare makes music for those of us who came of age reblogging doe-eyed American Apparel ads with the weight of Web 3.0 looming on the horizon.


Fontaines D.C. - Romance (XL Recordings)

This album first entered the Also Cool consciousness in Paris this summer, when every bar we went to somehow played Romance all night long. While we’ve been big fans of the band for quite some time and were happy to hear they were getting recognition, but we had no idea how successful the album had become. The innovative, surging yet punchy composition, paired with vulnerable and gritty lyricism, grabs you by the throat and leaves you wanting more. Fontaines D.C. has set a new bar for indie rock (although you can hardly call hundreds of millions of streams indie), and has given the industry a hard shove in the right direction. 


Khruangbin - A La Sala (Dead Oceans)

Houston trio Khruangbin cast a spell of surfy grooves with their latest album A La Sala. The psych-funk record is assured in its composition, rejecting flourish for atmosphere, and it yields an uplifting result. While there are strutting basslines and loungey guitar licks aplenty, A La Sala is meant to be enjoyed in all its leisure. Every song is another petal swaying in the breeze.


Kim Gordon - The Collective (Matador Records)

Underground polymath Kim Gordon celebrated her 71st solar return touring her fearless post-rock opus The Collective. Released this past March, The Collective serves up a “blistering collage of dissonant guitar [with] an ear-splitting trap underbelly” (Zoë Argiropulos-Hunter - Also Cool’s Playlist Refresh, February 23rd, 2024). With diaristic meditations on doom scrolling, heteronormativity and the mainstream, paired with noisy, gripping and avant-garde bed tracks, Gordon’s sophomore solo venture proves that she has yet to rest on her (self-taught) musical laurels. 


Mdou Moctar - Funeral For Justice (Matador Records)

Mdou Moctar continues to dominate psych rock with his 6th studio album Funeral for Justice. On Funeral for Justice, the Saharan desert blues guitarist and singer, alongside his equally impressive band, delivers a masterful denunciation of France’s colonial legacy in his homeland of Niger. Embracing rebellious tones and an accelerated pace— all while uplifting Moctar’s Indigenous mother tongue of Tamasheq from start to finish— Funeral for Justice is an impeccably produced protest album and a steadfast commitment to honouring one’s roots.


Molchat Doma - Belaya Polosa (Sacred Bones Records)

Molchat Doma have long been the reference point when it comes to dark-wave, post-punk and cold-wave. Their music is the meeting point for goths, vampires, and just about every Eastern European Brutalist video edit on the Internet. Belaya Polosa, released earlier this year via Sacred Bones, expands their universe with new techno-adjacent soundscapes, while staying true to their post-punk origins, and of course, heartbreaking lyrics. The album explores their new reality in Los Angeles and the loneliness that comes with it, having left their lives behind in Minsk, Belarus: “Everyone who I have known for a long time / Everything I haven’t lost / I put it off for years / Pain and resentment of the days – there seems to be no difference / How everyone is so used to it!” The band will continue their epic tour across North America in January.


Nick Schofield - Ambient Ensemble (Forward Music Group)

“Self-proclaimed ‘ambient raver’ Nick Schofield (Best Fern, Saxsyndrum) [dropped] his third solo sonic venture, Ambient Ensemble, via Halifax label Forward Music Group. Along with a band of masterly local collaborators (Yolande Laroche, Philippe Charbonneau, and Mika Posen), the Hull, QC-based electroacoustic composer achieves otherworldly splendour on Ambient Ensemble. Likened to works by masters Brian Eno and Philip Glass, Schofield's delicate yet profound Ambient Ensemble is a kaleidoscope of lush, instrumental bliss.” 

- Zoë Argiropulos-Hunter - Also Cool Playlist Refresh, February 23rd, 2024


Trevor Sloan - A Room by the Green Sea

“On Sloan’s latest self-released album, A Room by the Green Sea, the simple beauty of summer vacations gone by unlocks so much more. Sloan teleports between country fairs and shifting waters, backed by layered acoustics, subtle drum patterns, and field recordings. From the precise memories of ‘Praying Mantis’ to the sober admissions of ‘Blade on My Face,’ A Room by the Green Sea is the embodiment of what you’d hope to hear by picking up a conch shell. It’s the creamy cable-knit jumper that you slip into as the sun kisses you goodbye.”

- Rebecca Judd, A Lost Season, A Magical Year: Trevor Sloan Releases "A Room by the Green Sea", September 6th, 2024


VICTIME - En conversation avec (Mothland)

“Deconstructing a guitar-bass-drums mold, while still embracing their unbridled exploratory approach, VICTIME have returned with a genreless sophomore manifesto that they credit as their best work to date. Hurtling at 100kph, En conversation avec is a corrosive, meter-busting rendez-vous of DIY breadboard overdubs, pixelated synth-scapes and a complete disregard for conventional musical permissibility.” 

- Zoë Argiropulos-Hunter -  Five Years and Three Cities: VICTIME Unveils New Album “En Conversation Avec” (Mothland), October 25th, 2024


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Sunflower Bean, Molchat Doma, Coco and Clair Clair, And More: Also Cool's Playlist Refresh

 

Coco & Clair Clair by Nicole Steriovski

Don’t let the shorter days get you down – our latest Playlist Refresh is here to shake things up.

The Also Cool team has compiled some recent treats from the likes of Shower Curtain, Chinese American Bear, Sunflower Bean, and other artists. As always, we encourage you to add our regularly updated Playlist Refresh on Spotify to stream along.

Now let’s get to it!

Sunflower Bean by Yulissa Benitez

Sunflower Bean - “Teach Me To Be Bad” 

NYC indie rock veterans Sunflower Bean return to their roots on “Teach Me To Be Bad.” The self-recorded and produced single is the trio’s second offering off their forthcoming EP SHAKE, out September 27th via Lucky Number. Exploring “a chance meeting with a special person [that] can change your life forever,” “Teach Me To Be Bad” is just as heavy-hitting as SHAKE’s self-titled lead single. With a delivery reminiscent of The Runaways, singer Julia Cumming growls atop grungy riffs and headbanging percussion, courtesy of bandmates Nick Kivlen and Olive Faber. Following the band’s 2022 pop-leaning record Headful of Sugar, the sonic direction of “Teach Me To Be Bad” nods to Sunflower Bean’s psych-rock coming-of-age, this time with a newfound maturity after a decade of gigging worldwide side by side.

Watch the Isaac Roberts-directed music video below.

“Goblin” by Shunk

Shunk - “Goblin”

Towing the line between playful and unruly, Montreal punk band Shunk has released their first single “Goblin.” The anticipated debut comes after a year of the band cutting their teeth in the underground music scene, making their mark with energetic live sets. A pulpy hint of what’s to come with a self-titled LP on the horizon, “Goblin” entrances with cutting vocals, zigzagging riffs and ostentatious lyrics inspired by Christina Rossetti’s poem “Goblin Market.”

Belaya Polosa by Molchat Doma

Molchat Doma - “Ty Zhe Znaesh Kto Ya”

Post-punk outfit Molchat Doma has shared the 90s-EBM inspired track “Ty Zhe Znaesh Kto Ya,” off their upcoming album Belaya Polosa (out on Sacred Bones September 6th). A starkly-upbeat contrast from the rest of the album, “Ty Zhe Znaesh Kto Ya” is accompanied by a surrealist black and white music video. The main character becomes overtaken by an infectious urge to dance at a dive bar, quickly acquiring an audience and a companion with an alien-looking infection.

“[This single] explores the pain and despair of feeling misunderstood by a loved one,” the band explains, “and the endless guilt that ensues, even though you don’t realize how you yourself contribute to this pain.”

The band has announced North American tour dates for 2025, following their extensive European announcement earlier this year, so be sure to catch them in a city near you. Watch the music video (directed by Maxim Kelly) below.

Girl by Coco & Clair Clair

Coco & Clair Clair - “Kate Spade”

Shortly before the release of their latest album Girl, alternative rap baddies Coco & Clair Clair dropped “Kate Spade” to tease the masses. This spunky two-minute track makes a strong impression with its sharp wordplay and cloud-rap stylings. “Write a hit song then I read a big book / I'm all about the lovin', you can call me Bell Hooks” sighs Clair Clair, impossibly chic yet amusingly inspiring. Coco & Clair Clair might be riding their own high, but they invite you to sit shotgun.

Take a peep at the “Kate Spade” visualizer below.

“wish u well” by Shower Curtain

Shower Curtain - “wish u well”

Shower Curtain, the four-piece NYC band led by Brazilian-American artist Victoria Winter, recently released “wish u well.” This track will be featured on their upcoming debut album words from a wishing well, set to drop October 11th via Angel Tapes/Fire Talk Records. The track is accompanied by a music video that captures the sonically-swirling but complex echo chamber of early adulthood through a saturated digicam world.

On creating the video, director Trevor Scholl says: “It’s an ode to the mentally healing aspect of going for a walk and how stepping out invites the unexplainable. I wanted to capture the sense of exploration found in fantasy films while capturing places we frequent and not relying on overtly ‘magical’ props.”

Chinese American Bear by Eleanor Petry

Chinese American Bear - “Take Me To Beijing (一起回北京)”

C-pop group Chinese American Bear have commanded our playlists all summer long, as they share snippets of their bubbly forthcoming album Wah!!! (out October 18th via Moshi Moshi Records). On their latest single, “Take Me To Beijing (一起回北京),” musicians Anne Tong and Bryce Barsten conjure up colourful memories from the summers of Tong’s youth. Her soft inflections add to the hazy appeal of Barsten’s synth-laden production, embodying a warmth that complements Wah!!!’s message of cross-cultural joy and longing.

Get lost in the imagery of “Take Me To Beijing (一起回北京)”’s music video (directed by Barsten) below.


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