Half a year in and already 2021 is shaping up to be a corker â in terms of albums, at least. While the outside world remains bleak, today’s artists have stepped up to the plate to deliver us mood-changing escapism, hard-hitting realism and everything in between. If the second half of the year is as musically rich as the first, we’re in for a real treat. For now, and in no particular order, here are the best albums of 2021 so far.
Shame, âDrunk Tank Pinkâ
After casting a sardonic punk spell on our hearts with their 2018 debut âSongs Of Praiseâ, Shameâs return found them struggling with life off the road and grappling with their identities back in the real world. The south Londonersâ second album drilled into chaos and claustrophobia, dove into their dreams to find answers and headed for the highlands to party with a man known as Acid Dad. The journey it went on was often intense, but equally as inventive â a fitting representation of the path you often take to discover who you really are.
NME said: ââDrunk Tank Pinkâ confirms Shameâs status as one of the most exciting bands at the forefront of British music. Long may they reign there.â
Celeste, âNot Your MuseâÂ
In early 2020, Celeste was the most hyped-up artist in the country â a fortunate but also potentially dangerous place to be for a musician who had yet to release their debut album. If there was a risk of the noise around her growing too loud, âNot Your Museâ silenced those fears spectacularly. Self-assured and elegant, it showcased an artist worthy of all the acclaim and more, able to break your heart at one moment and lift you up the next.
NME said: âThere may be elements of these greats like Amy Winehouse, Aretha Franklin and Billie Holiday in her vocals, but as âNot Your Museâ proves, Celeste is on her way to becoming a star in her own right.â
Sleaford Mods, âSpare Ribsâ
With Sleaford Modsâ commitment to telling it like it is, it would be easy â in these especially bleak times â for their latest album âSpare Ribsâ to have capitulated under all the doom. Instead, it danced through gallows humour and jagged post-punk riffs, the duo breathing new life into their oeuvre with new collaborations and more darkly funny one-liners. It raged, but still managed to find the light â a lesson for us all.
NME said: âThe extraordinary âSpare Ribsâ is graffiti on a concrete wall; thereâs no manifesto, no easy answers and nowhere to hide.â
Claud, âSuper Monsterâ
Growing up might be hard but, on their debut album, Claud effortlessly captures the highs and lows of coming of age. The rising bedroom-pop artist, who comes with a literal Phoebe Bridgers co-sign after being snapped up by her label Saddest Factory, deftly details the complexities of young love over a patchwork of genres, from funk-pop to pop-punk.
NME said: âThe honesty and authenticity of the situations [sung about] gives the album its emotional resonance, but Claud has the bonafide pop ear to back it up.â
Chung Ha, âQuerenciaâ
Packing the same blues-busting escapist energy as Dua Lipaâs âFuture Nostalgiaâ, Chung Haâs debut album whisked us off around the world and into her own universe. The globe-trotting âQuerenciaâ pulled from the sounds of Latin America, the Caribbean, European synth-pop, Afrobeat and more to create a boundary-free utopia that offered flirty fun, self-empowerment and doses of empathy. A sublime and addictive first full-length release from one of K-popâs most in-demand stars.
NME said: âIf its title refers to a place where you can be your true self, then this album reflects its creator as a curious, confident and passionate artist whose songs help make the world feel that little bit bigger again.â
Genesis Owusu, âSmiling With No Teethâ
On his debut album, the Ghanian-Australian solo artist put his own spin on modern hip-hop, bringing avant-garde flashes and a liberating individualism to the genre. Lyrically, Genesis Owusu took on subjects that were incredibly personal but had universal scope â the impact of racism on his own mental health, toxic relationships, and hiding your struggles to make others feel more comfortable. The combination is powerful and uniquely boundary-pushing.
NME said: âGenesis Owusu has delivered a riveting album that underscores the power of self-knowledge, perspective and art â one that should be cranked loud.â
Dry Cleaning, âNew Long Legâ
âI just want to put something positive into the world but itâs hard because Iâm so full of poisonous rage,â sighed Florence Shaw at the end of âEvery Day Carryâ, guitars squalling around her. She shouldnât be so hard on herself â âNew Long Legâ is a beacon of surrealist humour, psych-tinged post-punk and kitchen sink references that brightens up the world in one listen.
NME said: âInfluenced by newspaper headlines, shop front taglines and finding beauty in the everyday, Shawâs lyricism thrives in concealing devastating one-liners within verses about MĂŒller Corners and Antiques Roadshow.â
For Those I Love, âFor Those I Loveâ
Grief is something that has loomed over society in the last 15 months and the debut album from Dublinâs For Those I Love offered a musical friend to those struggling with it. Written after David Balfeâs best friend and musical partner Paul Curran took his own life, the record recalled happy, precious memories and highlighted the power of community and support. Most important of all, though, it urged listeners to keep going: âIf you can grasp it, own it, deal with it, you can heal with it.â
NME said: ââFor Those I Loveâ is not only an immaculate debut, but a beautiful record that speaks to anyone whoâs ever loved and lost, anyone who might be mourning or just processing the days of youthful abandon, or perhaps those who need reminding that you canât have shadows without the light.â
AJ Tracey, âFlu Gameâ
AJ Traceyâs second album might have been packed with big-name cameos â from T-Pain to Kehlani â but the real highlight was the growth and development of the West London MC himself. Making tracks that sound at home on chart radio is often seen as a negative â as though the songs might lack soul or creativity â but AJ Tracey proved on âFlu Gameâ that isnât always the case, scoring radio-friendly, hook-heavy hits that flew between vulnerable and supremely confident.
NME said: ââFlu Gameâ cements AJ Tracey as a commercially successful rapper still discovering new ways to craft hooks and clever wordplay.â
Girl In Red, âIf I Could Make It Go Quietâ
Louder and rowdier than her early material, Girl In Redâs debut album added a new facet to the poignant, personal songwriter that first came to the worldâs attention: guitar-shredding party-starter. Just because Marie Ulven decided to go off on the record, though, didnât mean sheâd waved goodbye to her introspective lyric-writing â the album still invited you into her inner thoughts, be they raging against characters in her life or processing struggles with mental health.
NME said: âA cinematic widening of scope, âIf I Could Make It Go Quietâ occasionally leans back on some blockbuster tropes, but in the stand-out moments Ulven proves that sheâs more than capable of rabble-rousing indie-rock and slow-burning yearning alike.â
Royal Blood, âTyphoonsâ
An album about a frontmanâs struggles with sobriety might not sound like it would be much fun â but, on their third record, Royal Blood managed to open up and vulnerably share Mike Kerrâs story while packing in grooves that make you want to move. The results were both euphoric and intimate; a celebration of making it through a dark time and an ode to honest, brave songwriting.
NME said: ââTyphoonsâ is not only their best work to date, but all the better for Royal Blood being free to explore what theyâre capable of.â
Lana Del Rey, âChemtrails Over The Country Clubâ
After many delays, Lana Del Reyâs long-awaited follow-up to âNorman Fucking Rockwell!â finally arrived in March and it was worth the wait. Leaning deeper into the 21st century Joni Mitchell sound sheâd begun drifting towards on that 2019 album, the star sets ruminations on fame and romance to lush folk, intertwined with hip-hop elements. It doesnât quite reach the same highs as âNFR!â, but itâs another dazzling collection that gets pretty close.
NME said: âMore than just being influenced by the likes of Joan Baez and Stevie Nicks, sheâs now on a par with them. Lana Del Rey is at the peak of her game â just donât expect her to come down anytime soon.â
Arlo Parks, âCollapsed In SunbeamsâÂ
Ahead of her debut album, Arlo Parks had garnered a reputation for being a moving, poetic songwriter whose creations could touch your soul. âCollapsed In Sunbeamsâ reinforced that notion , sharing stories from her adolescence that gently drifted through a spectrum of emotions and offered wisdom and empathy as the journey continued. If there was any doubt that Parks is a singular, special talent before â and there really shouldnât have been â this album made it resoundingly clear.
NME said: âArlo Parks may be the voice of Gen Z, but thereâs no doubt that this is a universal collection of stories thatâll provide solace for listeners of all ages and backgrounds for decades to come.â
Squid, âBright Green Fieldâ
If the Squid that first got the buzz-o-meter flying told quirky stories about houseplants and Sonic Youth superfans, on their debut album the Brighton band took a dive into subject matter thatâs a little more serious. Framed within the context of an imaginary cityscape, they take on right-wing propaganda and the evils of big corporations, setting their commentary to songs that veer from hook-filled bangers to avant-garde intriguers. Itâs massively ambitious, but they pull it off brilliantly.
NME said: âFrom their very earliest material it was clear to tell that Squid would only be able to truly fulfil their potential when given the canvas of an album, on which to tell a story that ebbs and flows at a pace and route that they dictate. âOn Bright Green Fieldâ, in all of its weird, frantic and fantastic glory, theyâve gone above and beyond.â
Ghetts, âConflict Of InterestâÂ
After 20 years in the game, itâs rare for an artist to produce their best work yet. But thatâs exactly what Ghetts did on his major label debut âConflict Of Interestâ. Earnest, autobiographical and full of powerful observations on life â and aided by some star turns from Ed Sheeran, Dave, Wretch 32 and more â the rapper proved heâs nowhere near past his peak yet.
NME said: âItâs a rare achievement to make an album as thoughtful and transparent as this; you need real lyrical talent to do so [âŠ] âConflict Of Interestâ could sit on the same shelf as Daveâs âPsychodramaâ as an album that depicts honest tales of London through the art of true lyricism, a tradition that will never die out.â
St. Vincent, âDaddyâs Homeâ

In Annie Clarkâs latest character transformation, we found her in full-on â70s-sleaze mode, adopting a new ‘daddy’ role thatâs both powerful and playful. Using her own fatherâs incarceration as a jump-off point, Clark filled the record with songs about humanityâs flawed citizens, crafting characters that leap through your speakers in 3D along with the gritty, funky fabric that the musician and her guitar weave throughout.
NME said: ââDaddyâs Homeâ is Clarkâs most welcoming record yet, defined by an arch humour which also brings its listeners closer than ever, and filled with compassion for the characters who dwell within it.â
Black Midi, âCavalcadeâ
Once Londonâs kings of buzz, since NME declared them the âbest band in Londonâ before releasing a single, Black Midi have settled into a journey that zigs and zags in the most unpredictable forms. Their second album gave us their most thrilling about-turn yet, screeching through noise rock, ambient folk and more in exhilarating fashion. Where will they go from here? Weâll just have to strap in and cling on to find out.
NME said: âOne thing emphatically confirmed is that theyâre miles beyond the flash-in-the-pan buzz band some pre-emptively penned them as. Whatever form, sound or shape they might gravitate towards next, itâs certain that theyâre here to stay, and their intense fire shows no danger of burning out.â
Olivia Rodrigo, âSourâ
When Olivia Rodrigo released her debut single âDrivers Licenseâ earlier this year, it took on a life of its own, refusing to be toppled from the peak of the charts or vacate the brain of anyone whoâd listened to it, even just once. It was the kind of success that can silence an artist before theyâve even begun â how do you follow that? In Rodrigoâs case, the answer was to look to the angsty sounds of the â90s and â00s and repurpose them on a break-up album that sizzles with insecurities, jealousy, rage, heartbreak and begrudging acceptance.
NME said: âFor the most part, Rodrigo has passed the bar she set on âDrivers Licenseâ, sharing with us an almost-masterpiece thatâs equal parts confident, cool and exhilaratingly real. This is no flash-in-the-pan artist, but one weâll be living with for years to come.
Easy Life, âLifeâs A Beachâ
With a concept thatâs centred around aspiration and the romanticism of the seaside, Easy Lifeâs debut is a modern British gem. Like a day spent gorging on ice cream under the sun and wasting all your money trying to win at the arcade, it seesaws through its subject matter, egging you on before throwing an arm around your shoulder. All the while, it confirms the Leicester bandâs status as one of the best new bands around.
NME said: âA melancholy streak runs through the albumâs second half where tales of devotion (âLifeboatâ), longing (âDaydreamsâ) and ruminations on mental health and anxiety (âNightmaresâ, âLiving Strangeâ) shine.â
Tomorrow X Together, âThe Chaos Chapter: Freezeâ
In pandemic life, everything feels like a struggle but spare a thought for those dealing with the usual trials of coming-of-age in amongst this global nightmare. As members of that generation, Tomorrow X Together put their stories at the forefront of âThe Chaos Chapter: Freezeâ, submerging themselves in frustration and cynicism. The optimists within them managed to win out though â their second album raced through the upbeat sounds of hyperpop, hip-hop and more, while reminding us of the power of love to get us through.
NME said: âLife might be bleak at the moment, but at least we have TXT to turn our many lemons into a wealth of lemonade.â
Wolf Alice, âBlue Weekendâ
How do you follow up an album as perfect as 2017âs âVisions Of A Lifeâ? In Wolf Aliceâs case, by making a record thatâs even more flawless; a widescreen, atmospheric beauty that sets the bar for British music. Thatâs exactly what âBlue Weekendâ is and does, offering stunning saunters through acerbic punk, cinematic indie, tender folk and more, while Ellie Rowsellâs poetic lyrics make you want to scream, swoon and sob throughout.
NME said: âBlue Weekendâ is the groupâs most cohesive listen, and keeps intact the restless spirit that makes their work so unpredictable and exciting.â
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