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Top 20 Records of 2025

Welcome to the year-end edition of the Paradise Found Records blog, It was our best year yet, and we greatly appreciate the support of our customers in the Front Range and Northern California. We love sharing good music with you, and there is nothing better than seeing your smiling faces! Record Store Day 2026 is on April 18 and we’re looking forward to more events and listening parties in the coming year. From the bottom of our hearts, thank you for your support and for making our jobs so much fun.

2025 was another great year for new music. The big story last year was Chappell Roan, whose late 2023 release The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess continues to sell well at both locations. The big music story this year was KPop Demon Hunters, an American-made Netflix movie that greatly expanded K-pop’s popularity across the globe. The film starred fictional K-pop girl group Huntr/x and became the most-watched film on Netflix and some of the most-streamed music on Spotify. If you’re unfamiliar with the music or movie, just ask someone born this century and they’ll bring you up to speed. There is a KPop Demon Hunters soundtrack album out on vinyl, but our biggest sellers in 2025 included Hayley Williams’ excellent Ego Death at a Bachelorette Party and, as always, Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours, a perennial favorite.

My two favorite albums of the year, by Jeff Tweedy and Geese, both came out on the same late September Friday. I’m tempted to crown the Geese album number one for its sheer brilliance and originality, but I think Jeff Tweedy’s ambition deserves to win out. Twilight Override is his best solo work, and its thirty songs are a salve for trying times.

Here are my top twenty records of the year (the top ten are listed in alpha order), including the five best archival releases.

Big Thief – Double Infinity

What do you do when an original member (bassist Max Oleartchik) departs after nine years? If you’re Big Thief you lean into the jammier style of songs like “Time Escaping” and “Love Love Love” from 2022’s superb Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe in You.  Much of the credit for the appeal of Double Infinity goes to multi-instrumentalist Laraaji, whose zither, piano and percussion appear throughout along with distinctive vocals on “Words” and “Grandmother.” This may be a transitional phase for Big Thief, but even when not up to their high standards it’s still consistently satisfying. (Favorite track: “Words”)

 

 

Alex G – Headlights

The tenth record from Alex Giannascoli aka (Sandy) Alex G aka Alex G’s is his first major-label release. The good news is he doesn’t stray from the formula of 2022’s excellent God Save The Animals other than dialing back on instrumental numbers. A true one-man-band, Giannascoli plays nearly every instrument here and varies between folk-rock and indie-rock with weird Auto-Tune and other vocal effects and found sounds mixed in to keep things interesting. He closes the record with its most rocking song, the rollicking “Logan Hotel,” recorded live with his touring band at the eponymous Philadelphia location. (Favorite track: “Afterlife”)

 

 

Geese – Getting Killed

The Brooklyn group’s fourth album is overstuffed, manic and wholly original. Lead singer Cameron Winter’s December 2024 solo effort was subdued, but here the group moves in the opposite direction, creating a hybrid of Talking Heads, Captain Beefheart and Radiohead that explodes off the turntable. Winter’s expressive voice soars above it all while guitarist Emily Green’s chiming guitars lead the songs towards powerful finishes. This is that rare album that sounds bizarre and off-putting at first–opening track “Trinidad” literally features Winter screaming “There’s a bomb in my car!”–but quickly worms its way into the brain and rewards repeated listening. (Favorite track: “Islands of Men”)

 

S.G. Goodman – Planting By The Signs

The title of S.G. Goodman’s third album refers to following nature’s cues. In Goodman’s case, those cues were learned in the hollers of southeast Kentucky where she grew up “living like the sun don’t shine on the same dog’s ass every day.” The record leads off with driving Americana before settling into pretty, sparse folk duets with Bonnie Prince Billy and Matthew Rowan. “Heaven Song” is my favorite closer of the year, a nine-minute, slow-building shaggy dog story that finds Goodman meandering through a life of love and loss in an old Chevy Malibu, ultimately concluding that a philosophy of “Maybe if I see it then I’ll want it” may be the closest she’s going to get to finding meaning. (Favorite track: “Heaven Song”)

 

Haim – I Quit

Haim’s follow-up to 2020’s superb Women in Music Part III might not quite reach that album’s heights, but it still showcases the sisters’ ability to cover a lot of musical ground. First single and song-of-the-summer candidate “Relationships” features beat-heavy Queen Bey style while “Down to be Wrong” is an unabashed Tom Petty tribute. Whether she’s shredding on her electric guitar or singing confessional Americana, middle sister Danielle adds R&B to the sunny SoCal sentiments of her Laurel Canyon ancestors to create sumptuous sounds for the streaming generation. (Favorite track: “Down To Be Wrong”)

 

 

My Morning Jacket – Is

The tenth studio record from Jim James and company is their best since 2011’s Circuital, and the secret is the songs. Bringing in famed Pearl Jam/Bruce Springsteen producer Brendan O’Brien also works wonders. “Time Waited” and “Squid Ink” throwback respectively to their more soulful and anthemic aspirations, while “I Can Hear Your Love” and “Beginning at the Ending”  take the sound in a more concise pop direction. “Half a Lifetime” starts with a staccato structure before delivering a chorus for the ages. It’s always refreshing when a band finds a new gear this far into its career. (Favorite track: “Half a Lifetime”)

 

Margo Price – Hard Headed Woman

After the psychedelics-fueled rock of 2023’s Strays, Margo Price returns to her alt-country roots on an excellent fifth record. Whether she’s quoting Kris Kristofferson in “Don’t Let the Bastards Get You Down” or spinning Paul Simon’s “Still Crazy After All These Years” into the Nashville pop of “Love Me Like You Used to Do” with vocal help from Tyler Childers, Price has a knack for memorable melodies and wears her Nashville outlaw country badge like a pair of comfy slippers. Price’s powerful live shows have helped her build a steady fan base; she’s way overdue to break through in 2026. (Favorite track: “Don’t Let the Bastards Get You Down.”)

 

Snocaps – Snocaps

In late October this infectious debut from an Americana supergroup dropped with no advance notice. Snocaps members include Katie Crutchfield (aka Waxahatchee) and MJ Lenderman (the Wednesday guitarist member who’s solo Manning Fireworks was one of 2024’s best albums) along with Crutchfield’s twin sister Alison and Brad Cook. The songs are more indie-rock than what you might expect–imagine the Breeders with a bit of a country disposition–and bring the Crutchfield sisters together for the first time since they played together as P.S. Eliot last decade. Lenderman’s contributions recall the Byrds more than the Neil Young vibe of his other work. The end result is a wonderful, unexpected treat. (Favorite track: “Heathcliff”)

 

Jeff Tweedy – Twilight Override

The Wilco front man’s latest is an impressive 3-LP, thirty-song attempt to raise spirits through art. Whether he’s encouraging listeners in “Feel Free,” joking about a miserable prom in “Forever Never Ends,” embracing small joys in “One Tiny Flower” or paying tribute to the Velvet Underground in “Lou Reed Was My Babysitter,” his passion, humor and dedication shine throughout. Simultaneously ambitious and simple, the record is a heartwarming gift. “Amar Bharati” may be a tribute to the Indian ascetic who has kept his arm raised in devotion for fifty-plus years, but it’s just as easily a metaphor for Tweedy’s unceasing determination to make creating art his raison d’etre. Deeply personal, Twilight Override goes places Wilco hasn’t gone, no small feat. (Favorite track: “Amar Bharati”)

Wet Leg – Moisturizer

The Isle of Wight’s Rhian Teasdale and Hester Chambers burst on the scene in 2021 with two slices of indie-rock heaven, “Chaise Lounge” and “Wet Dream.” Their ensuing debut album maintained that energy and confirmed them as legit. Moisturizer impressively takes things up a notch. Now fully embracing music as a career, they’ve also declared themselves a band and not a duo, boosting the fellow musicians who contributed to the debut. Together they craft unique earworms that showcase their sense of humor and skill at creating irresistible hooks. (Favorite track: “Davina McCall”

 

 

(Next 5: Matt Berninger — Get Sunk; Car Seat Headrest — The Scholars; Lucy Dacus — Forever is a Feeling; Mavis Staples — Sad and Beautiful World; Wednesday — Bleeds)

Five Best Archival Releases

Buckingham Nicks – Buckingham Nicks

In 1973 Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks worked with producer Keith Olsen on an impressive debut of Southern California folk-rock. Olsen famously played the album for Mick Fleetwood, who was in LA shopping for a new front man, and the rest is history. The LP has been out-of-print since its original release and has become a grail over the following decades. In September the pair finally put their acrimony aside long enough to coordinate on a repressing so that it’s finally reasonably priced and easily found. It’s required listening for Rumours and Fleetwood Mac fans; you can hear the seeds of “The Chain” in “Lola (My Love)” and of “Second Hand News” in “Don’t Let Me Down Again.” The LP also includes an early version of “Crystal,” later reworked on Fleetwood Mac. (Favorite track: “Don’t Let Me Down Again”)

Nick Drake – The Making of Five Leaves Left

Nick Drake died in 1974 after only three records of highly distinctive folk. It wasn’t until twenty-five years later, after “Pink Moon” was used in an Apple ad, that his music found the audience it deserved. Notoriously shy, Drake only played a handful of shows and fans have since grabbed onto any available archival material. This box contains a treasure trove of recordings from his 1969 debut, including reels discovered in the collection of folk peer Beverly Martyn. Not everything here is a revelation, but it’s still powerful and stirring to hear Drake develop songs including “Time Has Told Me,” “Man in a Shed” and “River Man” into the shape that would make them folk standards. (Favorite track: “River Man” Take 1, 4th January 1969)

 

Grateful Dead – Enjoying The Ride

How does a group that’s released more archival material than any other musical act in history celebrate its sixtieth anniversary? If you’re the Grateful Dead it’s with a 60-CD (and one cassette) behemoth that includes all or parts of twenty-nine shows spanning 1969-1994 from twenty-one of their favorite venues (including Red Rocks, of course). With a $600 price tag and a limited run of 6,000–which sold out within weeks–this one was only for the most hardcore heads, but props to the Dead for finding a way to top their many prior boxes. Start saving now for 2035’s 70th anniversary release. (Favorite track: “Hard to Handle” Live at Fillmore East, New York, NY 4/25/71)

 

 

Patti Smith – Horses (50th anniversary edition)

Patti Smith and Debbie Harry were the only female bandleaders to emerge from the mid-seventies New York scene; Smith incorporated poetry from the beginning and has more recently become an excellent author, as evidenced by the three books she’s released in the past decade and a fourth, Bread of Angels, that came out in November. The 50th anniversary edition of her beloved debut comes with many previously unreleased delights including her original demo tape and a great take of Smokey Robinson’s classic “When The Hunter Gets Captured By The Game.” (Favorite track: “When The Hunter Gets Captured By The Game”)

 

Talking Heads – More Songs About Buildings and Food

The sophomore Talking Heads effort was their first with Brian Eno as producer. Together they went on to produce some of the best and most influential music to come out of the New Wave movement born at CBGB in Manhattan’s East Village. The deluxe box includes a number of interesting outtakes and a live 1978 New York show, but the real treat is a DVD of 1978 concert footage from New York and Berkeley (only available in the CD edition). Stop Making Sense may have shown the group at their peak, but the trademark nervous energy on display herein is a slice of heaven for anyone looking to witness the roots of one of the most important American acts ever. Be advised, the Berkeley footage is not high quality but still very much worth checking out. (Favorite track: “Found a Job” Live at the Entermedia Theatre, New York, NY 8/10/78)

Top 20 Records of 2024

Welcome to the year-end edition of the Paradise Found Records blog. It was another great year for music and for Paradise Found. Our Boulder and Petaluma locations continue to thrive, with more in-store performances and album signings than ever before. We couldn’t do it without you, our loyal customers. We love seeing your smiling faces and it makes our day to share music–new and old–with you!

There are good years for new music and there are great years for new music, and 2024 definitely fit the latter category. It seemed like high-quality new albums were released every week. Sometimes the release method itself was part of the story: Cindy Lee’s Diamond Jubilee was originally only available via download or as a two hour uninterrupted YouTube stream, while Jack White dropped his latest album without warning by giving it away at his Nashville and Detroit Third Man Records retail stores. Elsewhere, Chappell Roan, whose debut came out in September 2023, experienced the most meteoric rise by any act in recent memory. Over just a few months, Roan went from relatively unknown to headliner status playing late afternoon festival stages to packed crowds that didn’t always stick around to see whomever was top billed. At Coachella in April she performed in a tent for a few thousand fans; by Lollapalooza in July the difference in crowd size and enthusiasm had grown exponentially. Between her pure pop and over-the-top, drag-influenced presentation that referenced the eighties and disco with equal aplomb, Roan’s overnight success ten years after her first YouTube video was the story of the year. No album flew off the shelves here faster this year.

Coming up with just twenty favorite releases of the year was a challenge. My favorite album, Hurray for the Riff Raff’s The Past is Still Alive, reveals new depths with each listening and tells a story that is both topical and timeless. But any one of several others on my list could’ve been number one. Here are my top ten in alpha order, followed by the next five and my five favorite archival releases. Everything on this list available in our stores or online.

Brittany Howard – What Now

Howard’s sophomore solo album since her days leading Alabama Shakes embraced the bass, moving beyond the rock that permeates her prior work to create what sounds like a great unearthed Prince album. She made room for gospel touches on opener “Earth Sign” and “Red Flags” but largely focused on funk, eschewing her notable guitar skills as she expanded her palette and paid tribute to the Paisley Park sound. (Favorite track: “Every Color in Blue”)

 

 

Cindy Lee – Diamond Jubilee

This two-hour-long double album by Cindy Lee (aka Patrick Flegel from the band Women) leans into a production quality that embraces a Pet Sounds-era aesthetic. Only available currently via Bandcamp, Geocities and YouTube, Diamond Jubilee will finally get a vinyl release in February. Its blend of distant vocals, extended instrumental breaks, and dreamy psychedelic pop brings to mind a lo-fi Beach House.  (Favorite track: “Glitz”)

 

 

Hurray for the Riff Raff – The Past is Still Alive

Alynda Segarra’s latest effort is the culmination of an underappreciated career that draws on time spent hopping trains and busking on street corners with a keen eye for the challenges faced by the impoverished and disenfranchised. Segarra retains enough hope to draw a line from a dying species to a new love (“Buffalo”) before concluding that they feel like the band on the deck of the sinking Titanic, watching “the world burn with a tear in my eye.” (Favorite track: “Buffalo”)

 

 

MJ Lenderman – Manning Fireworks

Asheville-based MJ Lenderman had quite the year. His band, Wednesday, played to increasingly larger crowds and growing critical acclaim. His guitar work and vocals added much to Waxahatchee’s newest album, and his fourth solo studio effort is his best yet. Starting quietly with the plaintive folk of the title track and culminating with the Neil Young-inspired shredding and feedback-drenched metal machine music of “Bark at the Moon,” Manning Fireworks is a beguiling slice of Americana. (Favorite track: “Wristwatch”)

 

Father John Misty – Mahashmashana

Josh Tillman’s fifth album (the title means “great cremation ground”) is a return to form after the slight drop-off of his last two LPs. The themes of societal decline, aging gracefully and navigating Los Angeles traffic–literal and political–remain from his best work, but musically he ventures into harder rock (“She Cleans Up”) and funk (“I Guess Time Just Makes Fools of Us All”) for the first time. At his best as on the majestic opening title track, Misty writes songs to help listeners navigate their own end of days. (Favorite track: “I Guess Time Just Makes Fools of Us All”) 

 

 

St. Vincent – All Born Screaming

St. Vincent’s last album, 2021’s Daddy’s Home, was an R&B seventies tribute made in response to her father’s release from prison that conjured Stevie Wonder and Pink Floyd. Here she returns to her comfort zone with angrier, edgier lyrics and an emphasis on beats and synthesizers. She also uses strings for “Violent Times,” which sounds like a soundtrack for some imaginary, yet-to-be-made movie about the decline of Western civilization. (Favorite track: “Sweetest Fruit”)

 

 

Vampire Weekend – Only God Was Above Us

The departure of Rostam Batmanglij after 2013’s Modern Vampires of the City left co-leader Ezra Koenig searching for his own style; follow-up Father of the Bride was a transitional effort aided by the Haim sisters and an expanded group of musicians. Koenig regains his confidence and ventures in exciting new directions on Only God Was Above Us. The existential angsty lyrics set against cheery, polyrhythmic melodies are still there, but this is the sound of a new, more dissonant and intricate Vampire Weekend. If new parenthood has taught Koenig anything, it’s to let it go, which he preaches for eight minutes on the album’s ultimate and best track. (Favorite track: “Hope”)

 

Waxahatchee – Tiger’s Blood

Katie Crutchfield’s stellar 2020 St. Cloud grappled with her newfound sobriety but added a melodicism that helped break her to a wider audience, a success delayed by the pandemic’s shuttering of venues. Her follow-up is equally melodic and more mature, a logical next step toward festival headlining slots. Her unique Americana recalls a less Southern-fried  Lucinda Williams, but with a richness all her own. (Favorite track: “Right Back to It”)

 

 

Gillian Welch and David Rawlings – Woodland

Gillian Welch is the opposite of prolific; Woodland is her first record of original material in thirteen years and only her sixth since her 1996 debut. It’s also her first album to be co-billed with partner/guitarist David Rawlings and continues her streak of excellence. This is timeless music, simple folk that is evocative and sounds like it could’ve been created before the invention of electricity and amplification. Welch and Rawlings make music that sounds highly manicured while still steeped in Appalachian roots, seemingly designed to be sung around a campfire. (Favorite track: “What We Had”)

 

 

Jack White – No Name

Jack White’s six solo studio albums have all continued the blues passion and whimsical folk that brought him fame with The White Stripes. His latest and best solo effort yet is a sonic blast of garage rock that forsakes all subtlety and softness in favor of volume and high energy. White followed its release with an extensive tour of small venues announced shortly before each show, reinforcing the album’s impromptu-style release and ethos of “turn it up and play it loud so the neighbors complain.” (Favorite track: “What’s the Rumpus?”)

 

Next five: Nick Cave — Wild God; Kim Deal — Nobody Loves You More; Jessica Pratt — Here in the Pitch; Wilco — Hot Sun Cool Shroud; Tucker Zimmerman — Dance of Love

Top Five Archival Releases

Bowie–Rock’n’Roll Star!

This 5CD box provided an inside look at the creation of Bowie’s best  album, The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars. Starting with a San Francisco hotel room recording of what would become “Moonage Daydream” and continuing through a brief stint with The Arnold Corns alongside demos, BBC and live recordings, this is a fascinating, in-depth look at the workshopping and development of what would become one of the most beloved rock albums of all time. (Favorite track: “Star (aka Stars)”)

 

 

Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young–Live at Fillmore East, 1969

This September 1969 concert, recorded a month after their famed second live performance at Woodstock, finds one of the original supergroups honing their live act and integrating newest member Neil Young. The strength of the songs has not faded with time, and those harmonies! Come for the first album of acoustic songs, including a nearly nine-minute “Suite: Judy Blue Eyes.” Stay for the raging sixteen-minute “Down by the River” with Young and Stephen Stills trying to outduel each other on extended guitar solos. (Favorite track: “Down By The River”)

 

Joni Mitchell – Archives Volume 4: The Asylum Years (1976-1980)

The fourth installment of Joni Mitchell’s archives series finds her running from the fame of her biggest selling album, Court and Spark, in the direction of jazz and longer, more freeform compositions. The bridge was 1976’s The Hissing of Summer Lawns, which saw her feet planted in both worlds. Aided by bass wizard Jaco Pastorius, the follow-up Hejira was excellent if uncommercial. This box features demos, live shows, alternate takes and a few selections from Mitchell’s brief stint on Bob Dylan’s famous 1975 Rolling Thunder Revue Tour. (Favorite track: “Harry’s House”)

 

Talking Heads–Talking Heads ‘77

More than any other band, Talking Heads bridged the gap between punk and New Wave. Their debut married David Byrne’s nerd energy with the pounding rhythm of bassist Tina Weymouth and drummer Chris Frantz years before the sophisticated funk of Remain of Light. The deluxe box re-release features the quartet’s last ever CBGB’s performance plus an entire disc of revelatory demos and B-sides. (Favorite track: “Love>Buildings on Fire”)

 

 

Neil Young–Archives Vol. 3 1976-1987

Neil Young’s Archives Series has each featured a deep dive–including greatest hits and entire unreleased albums–but the latest installment, covering 1976-1987, is his most expansive edition yet, with 17 CDs and 5 Blu-Rays. The period saw Neil move from career peaks (Comes a Time, Rust Never Sleeps) to deep valleys (Everybody’s Rockin’) with fascinating diversions like Trans in between. The highlights of this collection include Young demoing American Stars’n’Bars material in Linda Ronstadt’s Malibu kitchen, a Nashville session with Nicolette Larson, and the acoustic shows at San Francisco’s tiny Boarding House that birthed Rust Never Sleeps. (Favorite Track: “Sail Away”)