If streaming companies’ year-in-review campaigns have proven us something, it’s that we’ve spent a staggering period of time drowning out the hum of on a regular basis life with music, podcasts and audio sequence. And with some unimaginable new releases this 12 months, we had been actually eatin’ good. Listed below are a number of the Engadget workforce’s favourite issues we listened to in 2025.
Spiritbox – Tsunami Sea
I grew to become conscious of Spiritbox in late 2024 shortly earlier than the band dropped its newest album, Tsunami Sea. On the time, I used to be in a deep Sleep Token part, and I don’t bear in mind how I stumbled upon Spiritbox, however I’m certain glad I did. Not realizing something in regards to the band, I initially thought it had two singers: one for clear vocals and one other for the cruel, guttural screams.
Nicely, I used to be mistaken. Vocalist Courtney LaPlante handles all of it, and she or he is a pressure of nature. After studying of a brand new band, I do what any self-respecting music nerd does: I seemed up dwell movies of them on YouTube. The way in which LaPlante seamlessly transitions from ethereal, ambient singing to a number of the finest growls you’ll hear in metallic music is easy. And after seeing Spiritbox dwell in individual earlier in December, I can attest to her potential to constantly nail each vocal kinds for everything of an hour-long set.
My infatuation with Spiritbox isn’t simply with the vocalist although. Guitarist Mike Stringer, LaPlante’s husband, additionally has numerous distinctive talents to supply. Stringer’s use of noise and whammy results in his riffs create a signature type, to not point out his mixture of nu-metal, djent and metalcore sensibilities. He additionally has a number of the thickest guitar tones I’ve ever heard dwell, and I used to be mesmerized for the total set. Stringer’s guitar work on Tsunami Sea is a main instance of a distinctive musician on the top of his powers.
Tsunami Sea takes you on a trip. The primary two tracks are all-out ragers, and after a slight respite in “Good Soul” and “Preserve Candy,” the album’s finest music comes fifth. I’ve heard LaPlante dedicate it to “all of the individuals I like to fucking hate,” and it’s clearly written about her enemies. It’s additionally the proper instance of what this band is able to. It’s three minutes of LaPlante’s screams interlaced with loads of Stringer’s trademark guitar work.
The remainder of the album showcases the band’s potential to mix dynamics, with “No Loss, No Love” and “Trip The Wave” offering the highlights on the again half of the report. The album’s title monitor is a superb automobile for LaPlante’s clear vocals, serving because the introduction to the album’s second act. When you’ve been enamored with Sleep Token this 12 months like I’ve, give Spiritbox a go — you received’t be sorry you probably did. — Billy Steele, Deputy Editor, Opinions
Bandsplain
I didn’t uncover Bandsplain in 2025, however I positively listened to it greater than another podcast by way of complete time spent. Positive, that’s as a result of most episodes are over three hours lengthy, however I digress. Host Yasi Salek does a deep dive on “cult bands and iconic artists” to… ahem, bandsplain why individuals love them. There’s a deep catalog of again episodes, so there’s certain to be an in-depth evaluation of a band you’re accustomed to. However even in the event you suppose you realize an artist, I’m prepared to guess Salek will reveal elements of the story you weren’t conscious of.
Jimmy Eat World’s Readability is a prime 5 all-timer for me, and Salek had loads to supply in regards to the narrative round that album I didn’t know. Her grunge sequence from 2024 was a historical past lesson I want I’d had in center college once I first found Soundgarden, Pearl Jam, Alice in Chains and the remainder of the lot. An older episode about 9 Inch Nails served because the primer for me seeing the band dwell for the primary time in September. And that’s the factor in regards to the present: the again catalog holds up. When you’re ready for the subsequent installment to drop, there’s actually one thing within the archives you’ll get pleasure from.
No shade to Salek’s colleagues at The Ringer, however the perfect episodes of Bandsplain are when the visitor is a musician. Thursday entrance man Geoff Rickly was glorious on that 9 Inch Nails episode, and Demise Cab for Cutie singer Ben Gibbard had me on the sting of my seat when he was on to debate The La’s — a band I’d by no means heard of earlier than. I’d additionally extremely advocate the episodes on Oasis and the newer one on Alanis Morissette. However, actually, you possibly can’t go mistaken ranging from wherever on the episode checklist. — B.S.
Lucy Dacus – Perpetually is a Feeling
I bear in mind being a youngster and listening to from an grownup that they didn’t religiously hunt down, analysis, consider and introduce new bands and songs into their lives as if all existence would stop with out the life-sustaining vitality of recent music. I used to be confused, involved and rattling certain that wouldn’t occur to me.
You already know the place this story goes: Job. Child. Home. Partner. Pets that can die if I don’t feed, stroll, play with and/or medicate them. I enable the algorithm to feed me new songs however not often does one thing stick, so I find yourself listening to tracks I bonded with in my teenagers and twenties.
This 12 months, Blossom & Bones, a three-day music competition in Ghost Ranch, New Mexico, managed to push by way of the churn and lodge new music into my mind. Together with my child and a few mates, I camped amongst a number of the most stunning landscapes conceivable and ambled over to the stage every night for performances by Santigold, Ani DiFranco and a couple of dozen extra.
Lucy Dacus, one third of the indie group Boygenius, did a one-hour set with loads of songs from her newest album Perpetually is a Feeling. Listening to the songs for the primary time, I felt like I’d been listening to them for years. Lilting harmonies and layered strings create a beautiful backdrop for Dacus’s velvet voice, however there’s a sharpness to her observations about relationships, rejection and intercourse. I’ve been looping the album ever since. — Amy Skorheim, Senior Reporter, Shopping for Recommendation
Blanco White – “So Sure” (single)
Early on the final live performance of the day at that very same competition, Blanco White took the stage. Folks had been aimlessly milling about and the solar hadn’t but set. Youngsters had been taking part in on the garden and the odor from the meals vehicles was intense, however I used to be enrapt by the 4 individuals on stage. The unhappy violin and strummy guitars floated with the hand-beat drum out into the purple hills. The music appeared like I felt: rooted and wrapped within the harsh great thing about the desert and I used to be actually glad to take that house with me. — A.S.
Martian Revolution
When you’re as massive a nerd as I’m, you would possibly know that Leo Tolstoy did not contemplate Battle and Peace to be a novel. The story is what most individuals learn for, however within the creator’s thoughts, all of the drama was a parable as an example his grand idea of historical past.
During the last 12 months, historical past podcaster Mike Duncan has achieved the same feat utilizing a medium Tolstoy by no means imagined. Duncan’s Revolutions podcast has coated ten completely different revolutionary upheavals throughout historical past, beginning with the English Civil Battle and ending with the Russian Revolution. After wrapping up the Bolsheviks, Duncan took a couple of episodes to counsel a grand idea of how revolutions unfold. For some time, it appeared like that was all we would get. Then, in the midst of 2024, he began posting authentic sci-fi — with none indication that this story, which adopted future Martians revolting in opposition to their company overlords on Earth, was in any manner completely different from the earlier ten seasons.
A part of what makes the Martian Revolution so glorious is Duncan’s deadpan supply. He by no means as soon as breaks character. He rattles off lists of fictional sources, apologizes for inaccuracies in prior episodes, and introduces made-up historic figures with the identical gravity he as soon as used to say George Washington or Simon Bolivar. When you’re a fan of Revolutions, you will have a blast recognizing character archetypes. (Mabel Dore is the Liberal Noble! Timothy Werner is the Man of Blood!)
However the podcast is nice even in the event you’ve by no means listened to an episode of Revolutions. It has a superb grasp of character and a way of inevitable tragedy, however with moments of pleasure leavened all through. I actually hope we do not wind up within the megacorp-ruled way forward for the podcast, but when we do, it’s going to be an incredible comfort if it will definitely seems the best way Duncan imagines. — Sam Chapman, Senior Author
Ron Gallo – Checkmate
My favourite artists are ones that shock me, and Ron Gallo is a grasp of reinvention. He is dabbled in absurdist punk, psychedelia, storage rock, Beatles-tinged pop and, now, stripped-down acoustic music. This isn’t a style I’m sometimes a fan of, Elliott Smith withstanding, however Checkmate is one thing particular. His lyrical prowess is off the charts right here, buying and selling his regular wordplay for easy and emotionally-gutting truisms about life, love and, effectively, the tip of the world.
In fact, the lyrics would not work if the songs weren’t good. The songs are superb. The title monitor is simply in regards to the excellent love music, with a major hook that will get misplaced in your head for weeks. Different tracks provide hints of Mac DeMarco, Dan Fogelberg, Kevin Morby and nearly everybody else who has crafted nice songs on an acoustic guitar. It is becoming that Gallo has discovered a house on the label Kill Rock Stars, which launched a lot of Elliott Smith’s work again within the day. As an apart, Gallo recurrently posts songs about present occasions on TikTok and different social media platforms, that are price trying out in the event you like stuff like Jesse Welles. — Lawrence Bonk, Contributing Reporter
De La Soul – Cabin within the Sky
There have been hip-hop albums that explored the finality and tragedy of loss of life, however not many that really tackled spirituality and long-term grief. De La Soul has performed simply that, following the passing of founding member Trugoy the Dove. This album serves as a ultimate testomony of kinds for Trugoy, as he is closely featured all through. In that manner, Cabin within the Sky is harking back to A Tribe Referred to as Quest’s 2016 masterpiece We Obtained It from Right here… Thank You 4 Your Service, which adopted the loss of life of rapper Phife Dawg.
Like Tribe’s fashionable basic, Cabin within the Sky is crammed with absolute bangers. It options standout beats by DJ Premier, Pete Rock, Trugoy, Jake One and others. The rhymes are nice and all three major De La members are given time to shine. Visitor rappers like Frequent and Nas acquired the memo, delivering a few of their most memorable verses in years. Heck, even Giancarlo Esposito is on board because the narrator. Some reviewers have dinged this album for being too lengthy however, come on, that is like complaining there’s an excessive amount of pizza. It is De La Soul. — L.B.
FKA twigs – Eusexua
This was a very good 12 months for brand new music IMO, a lot that I have been discovering it fairly troublesome to suppose again and decide on my favourite releases. However, FKA twigs’ Eusexua undeniably did some heavy lifting for me, just about carrying me by way of the primary six or so months of the 12 months with out a lot competitors, and I’ve circled proper again to it because the 12 months closes. It is an album that someway appears to fulfill each vibe. It’s going to have you ever in membership mode and prepared for an evening of sweaty, filthy dancing in below three minutes, or feeling brilliant and upbeat like a noon stroll on the primary day of spring — but it nonetheless hits once you’re having ol’ automotive cry.
“Lady Feels Good” is for certain one in all my most-played songs of the 12 months, adopted intently by “Eusexua,” “Good Stranger,” “Preserve It, Maintain It” and “Striptease.” If ever I am unable to determine what I am within the temper to hearken to, I throw this album on and it would not disappoint. — Cheyenne MacDonald, Weekend Editor
Faetooth – Labyrinthine
Faetooth’s sophomore album, Labyrinthine, is face-melting, melancholic perfection. The band describes its sound as “fairy doom,” however do not let that first phrase idiot you into pondering it is not heavy as hell. Labyrinthine goes unbelievably exhausting, and can have you feeling such as you’re eternally wandering a cursed lavatory, surrounded by the wailing of the unlucky souls who got here earlier than you. Do not consider me? Placed on “White Noise.” That is actually an album that ought to be loved in its entirety, although, and I am unable to individually identify half the songs on it as a result of I have a tendency to only preserve the entire thing taking part in on rotation. — C.M.
Orville Peck – Appaloosa
This EP is really a testomony to my potential to run my obsessions into the bottom, as a result of it solely got here out in mid-November and someway landed on my most-listened wrapup for the tip of the 12 months… which was launched some two weeks later. It is front-loaded with its strongest songs, a robust and type of haunting trio that simply flows superbly from one into the opposite: “Dreaded Sunset,” to “Drift Away” into “Atchafalaya” (ft. Noah Cyrus). As a fan of musicals, I additionally cherished the inclusion of “Perhaps This Time,” a canopy from Cabaret, particularly since I used to be fairly bummed to have missed Peck’s stint because the Emcee in Cabaret on Broadway this summer season. — C.M.
Case 63
I acquired into an audio sequence kick this 12 months, and dove into reveals like Unicorn Lady, Stalked! and extra. However not one of the dramatized fiction I listened to in 2025 had me hooked like Case 63. Setting apart that it’s voice-acted by A-listers Julianne Moore and Oscar Isaac, which is an exceptional pairing that received me over on star energy alone. The very best factor about Case 63 is its storytelling.
Moore stars as a psychologist, assembly Isaac for the primary time in a jail interview. Isaac has been claiming to be a traveler of kinds, and thru recorded classes and voice notes, we hear his facet of the story, in addition to her reactions and supreme involvement within the adventures. Each step of the best way, significantly to start with, there’s clear clarification as to why the alternate is being recorded. It isn’t vital, but it surely’s useful in my shopping for into the realism of the story.
It isn’t simply the tactic and technical points of the storytelling, in fact. Narratively, Case 63 is a gripping trip, and due to its brief episodes, it’s simple to binge actually shortly. There may be actually a beneficiant use of cliffhangers to assist pace issues alongside, however I discovered myself desperate to devour all the sequence in a single commute. The story continued to linger in my thoughts days after I completed each current seasons, and I’m hoping the brand new one drops quickly. When you’re on the lookout for a fast and simple sci-fi audio sequence, don’t miss Case 63. — Cherlynn Low, Managing Editor
Safe Love
I spent numerous time this 12 months attempting to study extra about my attachment type and the way it reveals up in all of the relationships in my life. Between Stephanie Rigg’s On Attachment podcast, the TV present {Couples} Remedy and all of the books on the subject of attachment kinds, trauma and extra, I’ve consumed all of them. And whereas they’ve all been useful in numerous methods, one podcast caught out to me this 12 months. It’s hosted by Julie Menanno, MA, LMFT, LCPC, creator of the @TheSecureRelationship account on Instagram and the creator of Secure Love: Create a relationship that lasts a lifetime.
You may most likely inform from that introduction what Menanno’s work is all about. Relationships, from the lens of attachment kinds. The Secure Love Podcast doesn’t simply re-deliver the identical info we’ve seen printed throughout varied media and platforms, although. Every season of the podcast (it’s partway by way of the second as of this writing) sees Menanno work with one couple by way of their adverse cycles, utilizing somatic practices to assist every associate perceive their feelings, triggers and reactions. As a result of we’re listening to actual individuals discuss real-life happenings, it’s not solely simple to narrate, however listeners usually see themselves in these situations. In the beginning of every episode, too, Menanno reads out or performs notes from the viewers, and you’ll see how fellow listeners have reacted.
This season, for instance, my good friend and another listeners appeared to essentially dislike Brian, the anxious male associate on this season’s pair. Whereas I’ve actually discovered a few of Brian’s methods of talking borderline offensive, I had much more sympathy for him as I began seeing his traits in my family members. I additionally began to establish together with his associate Bethany, who Menanno typed as having an avoidant attachment type.
As I listened to Bethany and Brian describe the explanations they acquired into fights and clarify the place they had been coming from, all of the sudden it felt just like the world made sense. I noticed comparable patterns and reasonings in my very own relationship, in addition to these of my dad and mom, kinfolk and mates.
It’s barely voyeuristic to hearken to one thing so intimate, in fact, however Menanno makes all of it instructional slightly than simply entertaining. She gently interrupts elements of every episode to inform the viewers why she asks sure questions or what she’s making an attempt to attain by asking Brian or Bethany to take a seat with their troublesome emotions.
I discovered her methodology acquainted, as I just lately began working with a somatic coach whose strategy is much like Menanno’s, which is rooted in emotion-focused remedy (EFT). Staying with uncomfortable emotions makes me need to leap out of my pores and skin, however with the ability to endure them, query why they come up after which perceive the place they arrive from is essential to serving to uncover the pondering that causes them. Generally they’re the results of flawed logic, catastrophic pondering or a easy lack of context, however usually they’re very affordable reactions.
When you’re seeking to perceive your self and your feelings a bit higher, or simply need to get an concept of what EFT or {couples} remedy appears like, I can’t advocate The Safe Love Podcast extremely sufficient. — C.L.
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