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The 50 Best New Zealand Albums of 2024

Rolling Stone AU/NZ counts down the top 50 New Zealand albums of 2024, featuring Fazerdaze, Georgia Lines, PARK RD, and more

The best New Zealand 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 New Zealand. 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.

Major problems persist in the Aotearoa music industry (some change is in the offing: hopefully Spotlight Aotearoa, which proposes boosting the presence of local acts on major international tours, comes to fruition), but Kiwi musicians beat on, boats against the current, doing what they do best: making songs and albums that stand comparison with the best music other countries are producing.

We’re happy with our final 50. A wide range of genres are represented, including Indigenous electronic producers, country troubadours, roots-reggae titans, and so many wonderful indie singer-songwriters. There are stunning comeback albums, exciting debut albums. There are albums that know what they are, and albums that defy easy categorisation.

And a special shout-out must go to Christchurch, whose artists feature in our list more prominently than those of any other town or city. Much has been made of the rejuvenation of the Canterbury city, and its tight-knit, productive music community is a key component of its resurgence.

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

5

Jim Nothing, ‘Grey Eyes, Grey Lynn’

The New Zealand indie music songbook has a new entry.

James Sullivan marked himself out as a slacker rock artist of note on In the Marigolds (2022), his first release as Jim Nothing, but his talent all comes together cohesively on his latest album. Whether he’s mellowing out in the blissful “Easter at the RSC”, or speeding through the rockier “Raleigh Arena”, there’s a clear vision here.

Make no mistake, Grey Eyes, Grey Lynn is a very New Zealand record.

As the title betrays, Sullivan lovingly describes the suburban scenes of his Grey Lynn neighbourhood, and the sense of place he conjures is striking. After listening to these tracks, you’ll want to take a sun-lit stroll through Grey Lynn Park, or people watch outside a bar on Richmond Road, or even, as “Easter at the RSC” brings to colourful life, while away weekend hours in the RSC, watching “old timers try their luck at the TAB.”

As Jim Nothing, Sullivan possesses a Lenderman-esque relatability, writing about Kiwi characters with care and precision. The history of New Zealand indie rock is upheld by normal people with extraordinary musical talent, and Sullivan is just the most recent example.

4

Holly Arrowsmith, ‘Blue Dreams’

Sometimes it’s best to step back as a critic and allow an artist describe their own art. According to Holly Arrowsmith, performing live is like “being together in a little shelter from the outside world where music is all we have to think about for a few blissful hours.

What else can be left to say? I’ll give it a go.

On Blue Dreams, her third album, Arrowsmith sounds just as close and soothing as she would at a show. The Christchurch-based singer-songwriter started recording Blue Dreams when she was seven months pregnant, so it’s no surprise that it’s suffused with weighty themes: life and death, faith and doubt, as well as conflicting emotions like despair and hopefulness.

Going through a pregnancy, both a deeply personal and innately universal experience, Arrowsmith courageously offers all of herself in these ten tracks, darkly capturing her transition into motherhood. Despite the upheaval of that time in her life, Arrowsmith often sings with a confronting serenity on Blue Dreams, as if these songs were recorded in retrospect, only yesterday, in the soothing glow of hindsight.

Blue Dreams is perhaps most notable for “Desert Dove,” a standout track that earned Arrowsmith her second APRA Country Music Song of the Year win. “Desert Dove” is a track typical of Arrowsmith, a mixture of dreamy flourishes and sombre realism.

What Arrowsmith’s album showcases above all else is a profound sense of care. There is care in the construction, Blue Dreams being split into two halves, one basking in energetic Americana, the other adhering to more traditional country and folk compositions; there is care in the cover artwork, a cyanotype of her Grandmother’s bucking horse brooch designed by her husband; and there is care, of course, in the songwriting, which is vulnerable and brave and thoughtful and distinct. 

3

JessB, ‘Feels Like Home’

JessB’s debut album opens with “Power”, a collaboration with Sampa the Great and dancehall reggae legend Sister Nancy. A lesser artist would perhaps have crumbled under the pressure of beginning their first record like that, but JessB more than holds her own.

The message behind “Power” is clear: JessB knows she belongs in such esteemed company, and she wants us to know it too.

The Auckland-based rapper and artist did everything but release a debut album over the past several years. She worked with international stars like Doja Cat, Sweetie, and G Flip, and shared stages with Genesis Owusu, Kehlani, and so many more big names. She co-founded a vital queer-friendly club space in Auckland, earned praise for her distinct fashion style and blistering singles, and appeared at notable festivals like Laneway and SXSW.

When Feels Like Home finally arrived this winter, it proved to be the debut album JessB was always capable of making. “Power” is a highlight among many highlights, from the slinky “Hold Me Down” to the supreme Gold Fang collaboration “Ring Ring”.

Rarely has an artist come into their debut album with such an extensive resumé behind them, which is why Feels Like Home often feels and sounds like a third or fourth album. JessB is just that good.

“Feels Like Home sounds global, an exportable collection ready to take JessB far from home base,” we praised in a positive review earlier this year.

2

MOKOTRON, ‘WAEREA’

While discussing his new album, MOKOTRON had a pensive thought: “2024 was the year that Māori electronic music came to the fore – is this the start of something or the end?”

Listening to WAEREA, there’s simply no way that this is the culmination of anything.

MOKOTRON is the moniker of Auckland-based Māori producer and academic Tiopira McDowell, who explores his Indigenous identity and more in bass-heavy electronic music. On WAEREA, his vision is informed by the past but his sound faces the future.

These tracks are electronic production par excellence. “To be honest, I’ve always had a vision of how this project should sound,” McDowell said. “Karakia, tauparapara, bars – like whaikōrero flows, puoro, 97 Techstep darkstyle strings and bass, angular breaks, subterranean bass drops, 134 – 140BPM, DnB on Lean – DnBLean.

“I finally got the MOKOTRON sound on the tune ‘KŌKIRI’, the album opener. So for me, the MOKOTRON kaupapa is finally about to start.”

“KŌKIRI” hits hard, and then the rest of WAEREA hits even harder. As McDowell told RNZ, he makes music as an outlet for his thoughts, choosing not to keep everything bottled up inside. And one doesn’t need to understand the language of these tracks to be affected by the waves of emotion, the force of feeling behind them.

MOKOTRON’s truly Aotearoa electronic sound overwhelms on record, but it’s even better in person. That’s why the artist has developed such a strong reputation in Tāmaki Makaurau’s live music scene. So put on WAEREA, be overwhelmed by MOKOTRON’s Māori Bass, but make sure you catch him playing this album live.

There’s no way that MOKOTRON won’t be a serious contender at next year’s Taite Music Prize and Aotearoa Music Awards. WAEREA, a self-admitted “major life goal” of McDowell’s, is a mighty album.

1

Fazerdaze, ‘Soft Power’

In 2017, Fazerdaze seemed primed to be New Zealand’s next breakout global success thanks to her acclaimed debut album, Morningide.

Then she disappeared from the spotlight. Fans were left to wonder what had happened to the indie-pop artist, hoping that she’d eventually return with new music. A strong stop-gap EP, Break!, was shared in 2022, satiating her fervent fanbase until her second album finally arrived this year.

The strengths and highlights of Soft Power are so many that fans would be forgiven for selfishly wishing this album had been released much sooner, but Fazerdaze wasn’t ready to give a record like Soft Power to the world back then.

The longer wait has only benefited her comeback album, which signals an exciting new chapter in her life and career.

“[…] the Aotearoa artist broadens her lush sonic palette with heavier synths, electronics, and scuzzy rock touches, pushing the boundaries of her indie pop while retaining the raw intimacy that defined her quietly brilliant earlier work,” we praised in a four-star review.

“In ‘A Thousand Years’, she confronts the passage of time, feeling “caught between the cracks.” She faces new experiences and personal growth while pulling away from a significant relationship in ‘Bigger’, and deals with the loss of youth in ‘Cherry Pie’.

“It’s this delicate yet powerful balance of grappling with intense change — ultimately seeking compassion for herself — interwoven with her expanded “bedroom stadium” sound that allows Soft Power to strike with gentle force, like the warm glow of sunlight breaking through after a long, dark night, recharging your spirit and lighting the way forward.”

Soft Power would have topped our list based on the merits of the music alone, but it’s the story behind the album that means it was the only choice for #1. The passing of time is unforgiving for artists, particularly female pop artists, so for Fazerdaze to return with such an accomplished, uncompromising album is a testament to her talent. New Zealand is lucky to have her back.

Read Fazerdaze’s recent Rolling Stone AU/NZ profile feature here.