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The 50 Best New Zealand Albums of 2025

Our ranking of the best New Zealand albums of 2025, featuring Lorde, BENEE, The Beths, Kaylee Bell, and more

Photo collage featuring New Zealand music acts

It’s been a banner year for New Zealand music.

Our editorial team spent longer than usual debating our favourite local albums of 2025, such was the incredible output of Kiwi acts.

We eventually settled on a top 50, though the order changed multiple times and could have changed some more.

Some of the country’s biggest names returned with revelatory albums, from Lorde to The Beths. New acts emerged with career-best records, particularly a cohort of exciting rock bands based down in Dunedin.

Some legends kept on going, such as The Bats with their excellent 11th album, while Scribe said goodbye to music with a stunning final collection.

Almost half of our top 10 is Māori acts, which feels notable.

At the end of 2024, the Hīkoi mō te Tiriti took over our country’s streets for one of New Zealand’s biggest-ever protest movements. The march united Kiwis of all different backgrounds against the current government’s regressive policies affecting Māori.

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This year has seen Māori musicians respond in song — some in optimistic celebration of their identity, others unleashing their fury at the people attempting to infringe upon their rights.

Check out our top 50 Aotearoa albums of the year below. —Conor Lochrie

All blurbs written by Conor Lochrie

Lorde Virgin
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Lorde, ‘Virgin’

Lorde’s previous album, Solar Power, had many detractors (and a few admirers, this writer included). Fans missed the moody palettes of Melodrama, or the incisive songwriting of Pure Heroine.

To those detractors, Virgin signals a return to the gritty Lorde of old. But things are different for the artist: her most introspective and personal record to date finds her redefining herself — her gender, her career, her past — in fascinating ways.

Virgin is a dizzying ode to reinvention, and it’s a record that perhaps only Lorde could have pulled off out of all her pop contemporaries. New Zealand’s most famous artist’s endless sonic curiosity should be celebrated.

MOKOMOKAI PONO! album cover
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MOKOMOKAI, ‘PONO!’

The headline of our 2025 interview with MOKOMOKAI says it all: “MOKOMOKAI embrace the complexity of being Māori. Their music is better for it.”

The Māori hip-hop trio’s willingness to tackle the most difficult of subject matter is winning them swathes of admirers and hardcore fans around Aotearoa.

On PONO!, their third album, Manu, Dusty, and Ghos are three musicians who know how to bring out the best in each other. The latter pair’s lounge instrumentals provide the ideal backdrop for Manu’s reflective rhymes; there can’t be many better groups in current hip-hop — at home or overseas — at conjuring spooky atmospherics. More rappers and producers would do well to follow MOKOMOKAI’s bold example: mining uncomfortable lyrical territory isn’t something to be feared.

Dale Kerrigan HEAVY GREASY album cover
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Dale Kerrigan, ‘HEAVY GREASY’

There’s a lot of noise being made down in Dunedin.

Shlee Nicholls, Josh Nicholls, Connor Blackie, and Joel Field make up Dale Kerrigan, who are leading an exciting vanguard of noise-rock bands in the damp South Island city.

After securing their status as one of the country’s best live acts, Dale Kerrigan released HEAVY GREASY, the album they’d always had the potential to make, midway through this year.

From start to finish, HEAVY GREASY is an assault on the senses. Amid layers and layers of disorientating distortion, Dale Kerrigan unleash head-banging moments of thrash that will appease the elder statesmen of punk and metal, alongside moodier flashes of emo that will appeal to disillusioned Gen Z.

The tracks on HEAVY GREASY sound like they could only have been made in Dunedin. “I had this theory that the reason I’m so noisy and angry is because of the weather in Dunedin,” Shlee once told RNZ). Their sound, however, is more akin to Slint and Sonic Youth than any of the classic Dunedin Sound bands.

HEAVY GREASY ends with what could be Dale Kerrigan’s mission statement: “The Amps Are for Everyone to Use”. Music should be messy; music should be raw; music and noise should be for everyone to make.

Dale Kerrigan are the sort of band that make you believe in the future of guitar music.

The Beths Straight Line Was a Lie album cover
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The Beths, ‘Straight Line Was a Lie’

How do you a top an album as special as Expert in a Dying Field? How do you top an album that won awards around New Zealand, and featured on almost every major music publication’s year-end list in 2022?

The Beths give it a great try on Straight Line Was a Lie, a record powered by Liz Stokes’ most personal songwriting to date.

Their  latest album is filled with plenty of their usual pristine power-pop, but it’s different tracks like the heartbreaking “Mother, Pray for Me” that really stand out.

“Past the pain and grandeur that accompany growth can sometimes come the realisation that you might end up exactly where you started. The Auckland, New Zealand-based four piece the Beths reckon with this conundrum on their fourth studio album, Straight Line Was a Lie, which adds a more introspective tone to the adrenaline-packed indie rock they’ve always done well,” Rolling Stone US noted in a positive review.

As Stokes told us in a recent interview, she battled through a lot to get to Straight Line Was a Lie. New Zealand is lucky to have a songwriter still operating at this level, despite personal obstacles, four albums into her career.

Geneva AM Pikipiki
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Geneva AM, ‘Pikipiki’

The dancefloor is calling you, thanks to Geneva AM.

Geneva Alexander-Marsters is the producer and vocalist behind Geneva AM, who believes in the power of music.

“For Pikipiki I wanted to be in a healing space and sometimes that means seeking community, manifesting joy, creating space for renewal – you don’t have to do that alone… I feel like I’ve been crafting some kind of positive force field that I’m about to throw over everyone,” she told Under the Radar.

Her debut album as Geneva AM, Pikipiki, is one way to go about achieving that. Pikipiki is a joyous and uplifting celebration of Alexander-Marsters’ Māori identity; even when it’s dealing with thorny issues, as in “Urban Planning”, you can’t help but tap your feet.

What Pikipiki achieves recalls MOKOTRON’s dazzling work on his Taite Music Prize-winning 2024 album, WEAREA: Alexander-Marsters bends classic genres — chiefly disco and dance — to her own will, reframing and rejuvenating them, utilising them to explore and honour her heritage.

And there might not be a better song than “Urban Planning” in all of New Zealand music this year.

“The motorway was an awa [river] / In the museum they put my waka/ I feel at home in the city / I got my Tipuna [ancestors] with me,” Alexander-Marsters sombrely ponders, all while the most enticing electronic rhythm chugs along; nobody said that the best dance music couldn’t be contemplative.

The most wonderful individual moment, though, comes during “Meet Again”, when Alexander-Marsters gets meta.

“Everybody on the dancefloor is famous… and they’re just really going for it, you know?” she says matter-of-factly, out of nowhere, breaking the spell of her own vibrant composition. Listen to Pikipiki and you’ll find yourself just “going for it” too.

Start getting your Taite Music Prize outfit ready, Alexander-Marsters.

Theia Girl, in a Savage World album cover
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Theia, ‘Girl, in a Savage World’

To say that Theia’s debut album was highly anticipated would be an understatement.

An alt-pop star of note for almost a decade, Theia waited so long to release her first full-length for an important reason: if she’d rushed into her debut while still being on a major label, it would be have been a much poorer record.

Theia went independent around the turn of the 2020s, surrounding herself with a “beautiful female team” who had her best interests at heart. A venture into te reo Māori as TE KAAHU then strengthened her belief in her own art.

The result is Girl, in a Savage World, one of the most overtly political albums in recent New Zealand music. “I’m so proud that I trusted my gut and my vision, because I know it was a wacky freaking vibe!” she told us.

It feels like fate that Theia’s album arrived at this particular moment, with New Zealand’s current conservative government attempting to push back on Māori rights.

Now based in Los Angeles, where she’s found a supportive community of fellow Indigenous people, she had to watch from afar as events like last year’s Hīkoi mō Te Tiriti happened in her homeland.

“I just threw everything away and started afresh when that new government came into power, and [I] was just filled with fury and passion,” she said.

Befitting the incendiary lyrics, the former alt-pop artist has turned punk on Girl, in a Savage World. “My country, she burns, it’s a holy war / We cannot return where we were before / Let us look above to the parting skies / Look upon the face of our Jesus Christ,” she sings in “Holy War”. “You wield your guns, you shot our sons / You made us rot in all you’ve done / Cut down our trees, brought your disease / You will not bring us to our knees,” she sings in “Hoki Whenua Mai (Return the Land)”. The time to speak one’s mind, Theia shows on her debut, is now.

Dick Move Dream, Believe, Achieve album cover
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Dick Move, ‘Dream, Believe, Achieve’

Dick Move make pure punk music, no post or art or proto prefixes in sight.

The Auckland band have never sounded as angry or righteous as they do on new album Dream, Believe, Achieve — quite right, too, considering the current state of New Zealand government.

In a blistering sub-30 minutes, Dick Move, led from the front by the impassioned Lucy Suttor, take on toxic men, capitalist politics, and patriarchal systems with lacerating honesty.

Proper punks have always been defined by a fearless determination to speak truth to power, and Dick Move’s five members — Suttor alongside Lucy Macrae, Hariet Ellis, Justin Rendell, and Luke Boyes — take pride in their anti-authoritarianism on their latest record.

But don’t let the heavy subject matter fool you: as Suttor recently told us, Dream, Believe, Achieve is a hopeful album, the work of musicians and people who believe in the power of community to overcome systematic injustices. Up the nurses, up Dick Move!

Marlon Williams Te Whare Tīwekaweka album cover
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Marlon Williams, ‘Te Whare Tīwekaweka’

Where to begin with Marlon Williams’ profoundly personal fourth album? Perhaps with the opening line in our review:

“Te Whare Tīwekaweka is the album we’ve all been waiting for from Marlon Williams — a stunning ode to love, life, and connection, sung entirely in te reo Māori.”

As captured in an accompanying documentary, this album meant more to Williams than any record that came before — “Williams, as you’ve never heard him before,” the headline to our print interview with him read.

Williams could have taken the easy route after the success of 2022’s chart-topping My Boy, but Te Whare Tīwekaweka represented the more ambitious and meaningful path forward.

How it paid off: Williams’ first album of original songs written and performed entirely in te reo Māori is a wonderful example of celebrating one’s heritage.

From the opening notes of “E Maweha Ana Au” onwards, Williams invites the listener on his journey of self-discovery.

Because this album may be intensely personal but it’s also for everyone; Williams didn’t hole up in a recording studio himself, after all, instead working closely with his band, the Yarra Benders, and Lyttelton artist KOMMI.

You can hear Williams’ connection to the material with every te reo lyric, the sense of a higher purpose being channelled through his art.

“His voice packs a velvet punch, rolling over breezy country-bluegrass strums and simple, pop-tinged melodies. Williams’ album is indebted to the late Hirini Melbourne’s minimalist style. Add the rich choral harmonies of He Waka Kōtuia, and these waiata hit deep — like a warm embrace that calls you home to te ao Māori,” our review continued.

“The title, which translates to ‘A Messy House’, sums up the creative chaos perfectly — it’s where Māori and non-Māori voices come together to craft something fresh…. Te Whare Tīwekaweka is a celebration of Māori culture, but it’s also for anyone looking to reflect, heal, and feel.”

Te Whare Tīwekaweka is a modern Aotearoa classic, and a reminder to always follow your spirit.