10 Great Albums of 2025

10 Great Albums of 2025

It’s the end of the year and all the music rags are putting out their “Best Albums of 2025” lists, and I want to participate like I’m a cool music rag too and not just some dork on his computer awkwardly struggling to be hip by saying “music rag.”  

This is not a definitive list nor is it necessarily a “Best Of” list, it’s just the albums I can pull from my dusty distracted noggin that came out this year that I recall being most stoked on. I’m sure I missed some gems, but that’s fine. This is good enough. Ten great albums that collectively kicked 2025’s ass.  

Check ‘em out if you haven’t yet, and let me know in the comments what I’ve overlooked or forgotten!

Listed in order of release month.


The Tubs - Cotton Crown

The Tubs – Cotton Crown (Mar 2025)

I stumbled upon The Tubs very recently, and their jangly guitar-driven alternative pop sound immediately transported me back to my college days in Athens, GA in the early 90s. Brings to mind some of the greats of that time and town like REM and Five Eight, and also some non-Athens essentials like Bob Mould. Bands that are just as relevant and important to me three decades later. This is a fun, catchy and energetic album that induced my nostalgia for bands from the good ole’ days while very much establishing its own unique, modern identity. 

Band website | Spotify


Propagandhi - At Peace

Propagandhi – At Peace  (March 2025)

Another brilliant album of furious fist-pumping punk rock by the beloved long-running Canadian punk legends. The title track is so good that I have to play it multiple times in a row before continuing with the rest of the record. I love how the band members seem like such fun, goofy fellows off stage, while their music is just so damn heavy and angry and makes you want to punch yourself or your friend in the face. Fuck, these guys are so good.

Band website | Spotify


Counting Crows - Butter Miracle, The Complete Sweets

Counting Crows – Butter Miracle, The Complete Sweets (May 2025)

I’m such a nerd for the Counting Crows that I would have included this album in my Top list even if it wasn’t great. But it is, because these guys are pros. If you only think of the Counting Crows as a band with some massive radio hits from the 90s, don’t do that anymore. Go back and listen to their entire catalog including this one, over and over, and understand why so many bands from so many genres hold them in such high esteem. The track “Under the Aurora” belongs up there next to some of their timeless classics like “A Long December,” “Have You Seen Me Lately,” “Sullivan Street,” “Round Here,” and, well, you get the point. 

Band Website | Spotify


Friendship - Caveman Wakes Up

Friendship – Caveman Wakes Up (May 2025)

For being such a subdued, sorrowful album, it packs some real power behind it. Slow and steady, but with an underlying earnest intensity that pulls you in like a big hug while also feeling like it might throw an empty bottle at you at any minute. “Tree of Heaven” and “Free Association” are a couple tracks that really get me. And of course, there’s the excellent tune “Resident Evil” towards the end of the record with one of the best angry choruses of the year: “Who’s that shithead in my living room playing Resident Evil!”

Band Website | Spotify


Fishbone - Stockholm Syndrome

Fishbone – Stockholm Syndrome (Jun 2025)

I wasn’t even old enough to drive when I first heard Fishbone and I’ve loved them ever since, and I love that they’re still making music, and I love that this new album is so good. Stockholm Syndrome does not mince words when expressing its outrage at our current political/cultural landscape, but as with all their albums, there remains an inherent positivity and an optimism that there’s still maybe a chance that love can get us through this. Frontman Angelo and team maintain the same manic celebratory energy they had when they were youngsters, and it’s infectious. Horns, keyboards, screaming guitars. It’s a fucking party. Listen to and love this album, and do anything you can to catch these guys live. 

Band website | Spotify


Turnstile - Never Enough

Turnstile – Never Enough (Jun 2025)

It took me a few listens before I understood all the hype around this album, but once it clicked for me, holy shit. This album rocks. Keyboards that sound like a 70s prog rock band’s idea of what dance music will sound like in 2025, layered over intense grinding hardcore guitar and absolutely ferocious percussion, this doesn’t seem like it should work, but man, it does. At times it conjured up in me a crazy mixed bag of memories of 80s RUSH, some Helmet, a smattering of early Yes, and maybe even a bit of old school Rage Against the Machine guitar shreds. Yet it’s very much an original, through and through. A prog hardcore moshpit dance party from Mars. I was late to the Turnstile craze but glad I finally made it there. 

Band website | Spotify


James McMurtry - The Black Dog and the Wandering Boy

James McMurtry – The Black Dog and the Wandering Boy (Jun 2025)

The latest from James McMurtry is what you would expect from James McMurtry – equal parts extraordinary songcraft and extraordinary storytelling. This album is basically the old timer bartender or neighbor down the street who’s had like 50 different careers throughout his life, is far more proud of his scars than his successes, is always primed with a new dirty joke on deck, and smiles every time he sees you. It’s a fool’s errand to try to play this album passively as background music. The stories draw you in and insist that you participate, and you’d be wise to oblige.

Band Website | Spotify


Petey USA - The Yips

Petey USA – The Yips (July 2025)

A fun, high energy album full of introspective, down-to-earth tunes backed by heavy guitar and upbeat 80s style keyboards. Petey USA excels at telling stories from the perspective of the every-man, with lyrics that are straight forward enough to be taken as is, or you can dig deeper for the larger themes buried within. Love, loss, growing old, growing apart, figuring it out, fucking up, fixing it. Lots of good human stuff in here, and some really catchy music to boot.

Check out my unnecessarily lengthy review of the album here.

Band website | Spotify


Alex G - Headlights

Alex G – Headlights (Sep 2025)

I’m pretty much an Alex G newbie, having only become aware of his music with his previous masterwork of an album, God Save the Animals. Since then, I’ve gone down the rabbit hole and discovered how unique and original and talented this dude is. Headlights is his first major label album, and it succeeds in capturing the gorgeous weirdness of his earlier stuff, with just a bit of extra sheen. A great new piece of art from a consistently inventive individual.

Band website | Spotify


Geese - Getting Killed

Geese – Getting Killed (Sep 2025)

This is the 2025 album that everyone is gushing over, with grandiose claims of Geese being the rock n roll saviors that Gen Z needed. The hyperbole is not without merit. This album is insane in all the right ways. It somehow manages to be both challenging art rock and hooky indie jam rock at the same time. It’s like they were deliberate in not giving two shits what the public thinks and, oops, they ended up with the public standing in line to kiss their ass. Well deserved. A wild, eclectic, original and inspired album. 

Check out my dumb, overly excited review of Getting Killed here.

Band website | Spotify


Well, that’s it!  How’d I do?  What’d I miss? 


14 responses to “10 Great Albums of 2025”

  1. Grant P Etheridge Avatar
    Grant P Etheridge

    Nice list Bones. Even though I don’t listen to music anymore (strictly am/HAM radio) I can tell you really enjoyed these albums. And you’re not fooling anyone acting like you’re not Petey. Nice try Bones/Petey.

    1. Bones Avatar

      Hey Grant, thanks for the comment.

      And congrats, you’re the first commenter on this fledgling little website besides my wife! I’m sure you’re proud of this badge of honor, and will be even more so when bonesfisher.com becomes the internet juggernaut that we’re all expecting it to be! Everyone knows the internet is desperate for content from a 50 year old goof rambling about shit that he likes.

      Godspeed on the HAM operation. Know who else is a HAM radio hobbyist? Yep, David Lowery, famed founder of bands Camper Van Beethoven and Cracker. AND current professor at UGA. You’re in good company.

      Regards,
      Petey… eh.. shit, I mean, Bones

  2. Freaky D Avatar
    Freaky D

    Thanks Bones. I’m pretty terrible at finding new music on my own. I’ll give some these a listen at work.

    1. Bones Avatar

      Heck yeah, Freaky. I think you’ll dig the Geese album. Feels right up your alley. And you’ll definitely get pumped on the Propagandhi album! Let me know what you think!

  3. Grant P Etheridge Avatar
    Grant P Etheridge

    Wow Bones! What an amazing little community you’ve built here! So do we just keep commenting back and forth?

    Do you think some computer science nerd could build a bot (or two) that could use a LLM to takeover and talk back and forth? One Bones bot and one Grant bot, just chatting away. That would really save some time.

    1. Bones Avatar

      Good point, and yes, I do think we just keep commenting back and forth indefinitely, because I don’t think this system allows emoticons, and so there’s no way to respond with a thumbs up to signify that you’ve moved on to other things. So I think we’re stuck here, pal, endlessly replying. Sorry I got you into this.

    2. Walk Dog Avatar
      Walk Dog

      There could be one Mystic Wind bot.

      1. Bones Avatar

        Oh man, Mystic Wind! What a throwback. I’ve gotta go and dig through the old Weathered archives and find that thread. That was amazing.

  4. Walk Dog Avatar
    Walk Dog

    That Geese album made me want to end it all halfway thru listening to it, but to each their own. Just glad Turnstile was on there. I love you.

    1. Bones Avatar

      Ha ha! Yeah, you were damn right about Turnstile, thanks for directing me to them. That album shreds. Do we still say “shreds”, by the way? If not, sorry, that album rips.

  5. Grant P Etheridge Avatar
    Grant P Etheridge

    I think it’s unfair to bots for you to say there could be no Mystic Wind bot. There is a bot out there dying to become a Mystic Wind bot, but it just reviewed your comment and has now self silenced. So sad. I wish I had a sad face emoji to place here.

  6. Grant P Etheridge Avatar
    Grant P Etheridge

    I misread your comment and now my whole post makes no sense and is quite inaccurate. I will now self silence.

  7. Grant P Etheridge Avatar
    Grant P Etheridge

    Maybe I’m the Mystic Wind bot that I was referring to. It all makes sense now. Happy (bot) face emoji.

    1. Bones Avatar

      Grant, I enjoyed reading as you played an internal game of “Bot or Not” and I’m glad you came out pleased with the results.

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