NPR Music's team of critics, editors, and producers has shared their top album recommendations for 2025, highlighting a diverse range of personal favorites amid a year of musical evolution. Each contributor selected one standout record they would recommend to anyone, resulting in a '12-pack' of elite, no-skips albums. Rosalía's LUX emerged as a critical darling, appearing across multiple lists for its spiritual depth and innovation.
2025 proved a vibrant year for music, with NPR Music embracing personal picks over consensus to capture the year's eclectic output. As streaming and AI challenges loomed, the team focused on albums that offered genuine discovery and emotional resonance. Their selections span genres from Latin alternative and jazz to hip-hop and indie rock, reflecting a push for softness and introspection amid global Latin music's explosion.
Standout Picks
Rosalía's LUX, released November 7 on Columbia, topped several lists, including those from Stephen Thompson, Anamaria Sayre, and Robin Hilton. Described as a 'spiritual statement' akin to John Coltrane's A Love Supreme, it explores feminine mysticism and sacredness through intense meditations. 'God descends and I ascend / We meet in the middle,' Rosalía sings, blending genres in a way that feels both new and timeless.
Other highlights include Annie DiRusso's debut Super Pedestrian (Summer Soup Songs, March 7), praised by Stephen Thompson for its 'brash, big-hearted' rock jams on youthful ennui. Patrick Watson's Uh Oh (Secret City, September 26) captivated Robin Hilton with its otherworldly mix of prepared instruments and falsetto, inspired by Watson's vocal struggles. Daniel Caesar's Son of Spergy (Republic, October 24) moved Bobby Carter for confronting family and faith, dethroning his 2017 breakthrough.
Broader Trends
Individual lists from NPR contributors like Hazel Cills and Rodney Carmichael emphasized hip-hop's resurgence in darker corners, with Kal Banx's RHODA (Top Dawg Entertainment, August 15) earning acclaim for its soul-searching double LP on loss and home. Latin albums like Bad Bunny's DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS and Queralt Lahoz's 9:30 PM captured a desire for stillness, featuring reflective pauses in high-energy tracks. These choices underscore 2025's balance of innovation and introspection, proving music's resilience.