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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.

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.