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The 50 Best Australian Albums of 2024

Rolling Stone AU/NZ counts down the best Australian albums of 2024, featuring Amyl and the Sniffers, Thelma Plum, and more

Best Australian albums of 2024

In 2023, when it came time for our editorial team to compile our year-end lists, we settled on a top 25 for Australia. This year, however, that just wasn’t going to be enough. Our 2024 list is 50-strong, and in truth it really could have been a lot more.

Global superstars like Charli XCX, Taylor Swift, and Sabrina Carpenter might have dominated the ARIA Charts this year, but Australians more than matched them on quality.

We decided against considering compilation and live albums (sorry Cold Chisel and Tropical Fuck Storm), while other albums just missed the cut after much back-and-forth.

But we’re happy with our final 50. A wide range of genres are represented, including electronic party-starters, established and emerging rock bands, hip-hop collectives, and a steady stream of singer-songwriters. There are albums that cement reputations, others that confirm an act’s early promise. Commercial behemoths battle it out with independent names, both at the top and bottom end of the list.

So without further ado, here are our top 50 Australian albums of 2024, ranked.

6

3%, ‘Kill the Dead’

What’s left to be said about Blak music collective 3%’s powerful debut album? How many superlatives are left to use? Our five-star review says it all:

“Although covering weighty themes of reclamation, Indigenous deaths in custody and closing the gap, Kill the Dead is more than an album that is built on songs and stories of protest,” our review stated.

“It’s also a beautifully celebratory moment for Blak musicians and artists. The arrival of this album is poignant, as the Australian music space is being flooded with the talents of a new generation of Blak excellence.

“The spirit that weaves throughout this album is natural; the chemistry between the members of 3% striking for a group that has only been together a short period of time. Timing is everything, and the connection between these artists feels perfectly aligned — this is music that has never been more relevant, or needed.”

5

SPEED, ‘Only One Mode’

SPEED’s inclusion this high up our list has a lot to do with their story. Rising out of the inner depths of Australia’s hardcore scene, growing mainstream recognition of their talent culminated in a stunning ARIAs win in the Best Hard Rock / Heavy Metal Album category last month.

They won that award for their debut album, Only One Mode, a battering ram of a record that heralds SPEED as one of the most exciting hardcore bands of their generation, not just in Australia but worldwide.

It takes a special band like SPEED to break out of a scene like hardcore in the manner that they did; that they’ve achieved this feat with uncompromising beliefs makes it all the more exhilarating.

4

Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds, ‘Wild God’

Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds’ first album in five years is a towering achievement.

Already nominated for the Australian Music Prize this year, Wild God is in with a chance of winning two Grammys (Best Alternative Music Album and Best Alternative Music Performance). Australia is lucky to have a group of musicians like Cave and co. operating at such a high level on their 18th album.

3

Good Morning, ‘Good Morning Seven’

As we wrote when in our Future of Music series earlier this year, Good Morning have a strong claim to be the most underrated Australian band of their generation.

The dreamy indie pop duo have been releasing excellent records since 2014, back when melancholic songs like “Warned You” and “Don’t Come Home Today” became sensations in indie circles.

Ten years later, Liam Parsons and Stefan Blair released Good Morning Seven, a double album that finally raised their profile in Australia and beyond.

For fans who’ve been listening since Shawcross (2014), or Glory (2016), or Basketball Breakups (2019), Good Morning Seven is the album they always knew was coming.

Parsons and Blair’s might still be DIY in spirit and execution, but their double album contains myriad polished productions, the pair displaying a Beatles-esque knack for gorgeous pop melodies. Try playing “The Worm Turns” just once; try not humming “Queen of Comedy” all day at work.

Like another stunning album this year, Cindy Lee’s instant classic Diamond Jubilee, it often sounds like the tracks on Good Morning Seven are being transmitted from another time altogether; wondrous chamber-pop from a forgotten dance hall coming to bless our chaotic modern times. (It’s a feat that The Lemon Twigs also pull off to great effect.)

As if a double album wasn’t enough, Good Morning shared another new album, The Accident, just a few weeks ago, and it could also have earned a spot in our top 50. But Good Morning Seven is the cult duo’s finest music – for now.

2

Royel Otis, ‘PRATTS & PAIN’

“Royel Otis back up the hype,” we declared in our review of PRATTS & PAIN earlier this year, and there was certainly a lot of hype surrounding the Sydney duo of Royel Maddell and Otis Pavlovic.

Hailed as Australia’s most promising guitar-led band thanks to songs like “Oysters in My Pocket” and “Kool Aid”, Royel Otis’ long-awaited debut album contained enough propulsive, danceable indie pop that it swept the 2024 ARIA Awards, including a win in the coveted Best Group category.

Now at the level where their Like A Version cover of Sophie Ellis-Bextor can go viral, the hype’s going to be even greater for their second album – whenever that may come.

1

Amyl and the Sniffers, ‘Cartoon Darkness’

Amyl and the Sniffers come out swinging wildly on “Jerkin'”, the opening track on their latest album, Cartoon Darkness.

“You’re a dumb cunt, you’re an asshole / Every time you talk, you mumble, grumbles / Need to wipe your mouth after you speak… You are ugly all day, I am hot always,” Amy Taylor scolds. (Pity whomever is receiving her derision; rather them than us.)

A lesser band would be mocked for opening an album with such aggressive self-aggrandising, but this is Amyl and the fucking Sniffers, and Taylor is the best Australian frontperson in decades – they can do and say whatever they want.

Tricky third albums have been the downfall of other big-name bands, but the Melbourne punks suffer no such problem. Despite the oft-lacerating lyrics, they sound more in control than ever on Cartoon Darkness, displaying boundless energy and fierce ambition.

Nothing is off the table lyrically, these 11 tracks taking on the climate crisis, war, the rise of AI, and the frailty of modern politics with passion and verve.

It’s not hyperbolic to say that Cartoon Darkness is the album that should cement Amyl’s standing as the pre-eminent Australian rock band of their generation.