NEW YORK, NY.- Every week, pop critics for The New York Times weigh in on notable new songs. After six months of listening, heres what they have on repeat. (Note: Its not a ranking, its a playlist.)
Sabrina Carpenter, Espresso: Atop a mid-tempo beat that recalls the muffled retro-funk of Doja Cats smash Say So, Sabrina Carpenter plays the unbothered temptress with winking humor: Say you cant sleep, baby I know, thats that me, espresso. Make it a double youve surely heard this one everywhere. LINDSAY ZOLADZ
Tyla, Safer: Following her worldwide 2023 hit Water, Tyla pulls away from temptation in Safer, harnessing the log-drum beat and sparse, subterranean bass lines of amapiano. Her choral call-and-response vocals carry South African tradition into the electronic wilderness of 21st-century romance. JON PARELES
Ariana Grande, We Cant Be Friends (Wait for Your Love): At once strobe-lit and silky, Ariana Grande appropriately channels Robyn the patron saint of crying in the club on this nimbly sung, melancholic pop hit, a highlight from her bittersweet seventh album, Eternal Sunshine. LINDSAY ZOLADZ
Billie Eilish, The Greatest: Billie Eilish extols her own composure and skill at dissembling holding back her unrequited love in The Greatest from Hit Me Hard and Soft. Delicate picking accompanies her as she sings about how she made it all look painless. Then she shatters that composure, opening her voice from breathy to belting while the production goes widescreen with drums and choir. When the music quiets again, her furious restraint is as palpable as her regret. JON PARELES
Kacey Musgraves, Deeper Well: Folky fingerpicking and new-agey thoughts about self-help make Deeper Well a gentle but firm rebuff. After musing on astrology and negative energy, Kacey Musgraves notes, Im saying goodbye to the people I feel/are real good at wasting my time. In the next verses, she leaves behind marijuana and rises above the limits of her upbringing. Theres no rancor, no gloating, just added shimmery reverberations as she grows up and moves on. JON PARELES
Zsela, Fire Excape: In Fire Excape, Zsela croons what turns out to be a love song but only eventually, after she notes, Theres a fire in the ocean when the oil starts spilling. The song takes shape over a lurching, start-stop beat, with some gaping silences, odd harmonic turns and sudden electronic surges, but amid the asymmetries Zsela proffers some husky reassurance: Well get along quite fine, thank you. JON PARELES
Beyoncé, 16 Carriages: In a flex of genre-spanning musicianship thats also a workaholics lament, Beyoncé recalls her past and doubles down on her ambition, singing, Aint got time to waste, I got art to make. The music is an arena-country crescendo, from acoustic-guitar strum to full-band impact topped by pedal-steel guitar. Shes not only claiming an expanded demographic base; shes using her celebrity clout to force some doors open. JON PARELES
Mk.gee, Little Bit More: A virtuoso with both fingers and effects, guitarist-songwriter-producer Mk.gee (Michael Todd Gordon) creates murky, contrapuntal tracks suffused with yearning and diffidence. In Little Bit More, from his album Two Star & the Dream Police, he promises, Baby, take what you want to the one who opened the door. A hopping six-beat guitar loop, a conversational bass line, high backup vocals peeking in here and there and occasional piano interjections conjure an elation that may not last. JON PARELES
St. Vincent, Broken Man: I can hold my arms wide open/but I need you to drive the nail, St. Vincent sings in Broken Man. Its a volcanic buildup of a song, from the sparsest ticking electronics to a hard-rock stomp to a full-scale pileup of guitars, drums and horns. JON PARELES
Mdou Moctar, Funeral for Justice: Over a hurtling beat and a chain of frantic, trilling, overdriven guitar riffs, Tuareg guitarist Mdou Moctar insists that African leaders should work together and push back against foreign interests, to Retake control of your resource-rich countries. The band couldnt sound more urgent. JON PARELES
Kim Gordon, Bye Bye: Kim Gordon, 71, explores the common ground between no-wave cool and SoundCloud rap on this corrosive opening track from her second solo album, The Collective. Atop an abrasive, hypnotic beat, she recites a fictional tour packing list, contrasting the chaotic and banal with flair. Youll never enunciate Eckhaus Latta the same way again. LINDSAY ZOLADZ
A.G. Cook, Britpop: The zany electronic producer A.G. Cook turns a simple, hypnotically repeated Charli XCX refrain Brit, Brit, Brit, Brit, Brit, like Britpop into an alternate-universe national anthem. Blur and Oasis never did it quite like this. LINDSAY ZOLADZ
Ibibio Sound Machine, Pull the Rope: The London-based, Nigerian-rooted band Ibibio Sound Machine has evolved into a starkly efficient electro-funk group, delivering community-minded messages in English and the Nigerian language Ibibio. Pull the Rope deploys an octave-hopping bass line, video-game blips and eventually a horn section to propel a constructive chant: Even though were eager to trigger/Lets pull the rope, together we hope. JON PARELES
Chappell Roan, Good Luck, Babe!: Rising pop star Chappell Roan sends an ex-lover off with an eye roll on the wrenching Good Luck, Babe!, a synth-driven tune topped by her best Kate Bush. Roan imagines her former flame kissing a hundred boys in bars and eventually becoming a mans dissatisfied wife in the aftermath of their affair. But ultimately, Roan chooses herself, singing with all her heart, I just wanna love someone who calls me baby. LINDSAY ZOLADZ
Dua Lipa, French Exit: Dua Lipas album Radical Optimism cruises past heartaches, treating bad choices and failed romances as setbacks that might be painful, but not for too long. In French Exit, she decides to ghost a relationship thats not working, comparing it to ducking out of a party early. The ingenious track, produced by Kevin Parker (Tame Impala) and hyperpop pro Danny L Harle, stacks up syncopations drums, acoustic guitar, flamenco handclaps, a little flute lick behind her not-too-regretful voice. JON PARELES
Maggie Rogers, Dont Forget Me: Maggie Rogers admits her friends relationships dont provide models for what shes looking for: Sallys getting married, Mollys out partying every night. Shes after something more casual but still lasting in its own way. Love me till your next somebody, Rogers sings to whomevers listening. And promise me that when its time to leave, dont forget me. LINDSAY ZOLADZ
Waxahatchee featuring MJ Lenderman, Right Back to It: Waxahatchees Katie Crutchfield marvels at long-term love by admitting how much she tests it. I let my mind run wild/Dont know why I do it, she sings, But you just settle in like a song with no end. The track is easygoing and countryish, and MJ Lenderman provides supportive harmony vocals and electric guitar. But the scratchy tension in Crutchfields voice betrays her continuing self-doubts. JON PARELES
Norah Jones, Staring at the Wall: Like the rest of her latest album, Visions, Staring at the Wall is a collaboration between Norah Jones and producer-drummer Leon Michels. Between his backbeat and her twangy guitar, understated keyboards and reassuring vocal harmonies, its clear shell make it through her misgivings just fine. JON PARELES
Jessica Pratt, Life Is: The milky-voiced singer-songwriter Jessica Pratt brings her sepia-toned sensibility to this dreamy folk-pop tune, making it sound like a glowing portal to an alternate past. LINDSAY ZOLADZ
Lido Pimienta, He Venido al Mar: I still dont know where I am going/But I have joy in my heart, Colombian-Canadian songwriter Lido Pimienta sings in He Venido al Mar (I Have Come to the Sea). Shes making a journey toward renewal, with her guileless soprano sailing above a track that begins with sparse electronic chords and gathers layers of percussion and voices, assembling a cumbia and a community out of thin air. JON PARELES
Kendrick Lamar, Euphoria: This salvo in Kendrick Lamars feud with Drake starts with Lamar rapping quickly but calmly over a smooth-jazz backdrop, taunting, I make music that electrify em, you make music that pacify em. But after he warns, Dont tell no lie about me/And I wont tell truths about you, the track changes to a tolling, droning trap dirge and Lamars delivery becomes biting, nasal and percussive. He switches from flow to flow with an accelerating barrage of attacks, professional and personal, from recording deals to parenting skills: cringe-worthy is a milder one. JON PARELES
Charli XCX, Girl, So Confusing: In snaking melodies atop shimmering club beats, Charli XCX pivots between cool-girl braggadocio and raw confessions of insecurity on her new album, Brat. Its so confusing sometimes to be a girl, she sings on the chorus of one of its most vulnerable songs, which explores her ambivalent relationship with a certain unnamed pop star doppelgänger. Her unabashedly messy, run-on candor is especially refreshing. LINDSAY ZOLADZ
Saya Gray, AA Bouquet for Your 180 Face: Canadian songwriter-producer Saya Grays voice is wry and a little sleepy as she reconsiders a relationship, singing, I bent over backwards so many times/I turned into a golden arch for you to walk through. But her production is alert, hyper-detailed and surreally unpredictable, segueing among ticking electronics, syncopated indie-rock, spacey vocal chorales, distorted guitars and what might be a koto. She may be lonely, but shes resourceful. JON PARELES
Hakushi Hasegawa, Departed: The laptop-wielding Japanese musician Hakushi Hasegawa delivers a manic demolition derby of a song with the hyperpop of Departed. Sweet vocal harmonies top a barrage of drums and sliding-pitch synthesizers; a brief respite midway through only makes the closing blitz sound more lightheartedly merciless. JON PARELES
Les Amazones dAfrique, Musow Danse: Musow Danse (Womens Dance) is the title track of the jubilant new album by Les Amazones dAfrique a Pan-African, proudly multilingual alliance of singers and songwriters carrying feminist messages to dance floors, like this chorus: Rise up African woman! JON PARELES
Nilüfer Yanya, Like I Say (I Runaway): I run away, cause Im on precious time, British musician Nilüfer Yanya sings. In classic Yanya fashion, Like I Say (I Runaway) has an almost collagelike feel, reveling in contrasting textures and suddenly erupting into a blaze of guitar distortion on the chorus. LINDSAY ZOLADZ
Clairo, Sexy to Someone: The alt-pop singer Clairo yearns to be the object of just one persons affection nothing more, nothing less, she sings on a track that pairs her breathily muttered vocals with a persistent groove, resulting in a kind of strutting summer anthem for introverts. LINDSAY ZOLADZ
Angélica Garcia, Color de Dolor: The music sounds absolutely joyful: major chords, a waltzing but flexible beat, a supportive backup choir reinforced by orchestral strings. But Angélica Garcia is singing, in Spanish, What is the color of pain? with vocal inflections that hint at both Latin pop and Indian ghazal. JON PARELES
Vampire Weekend, Mary Boone: Mary Boone, Mary Boone, I hope you feel like loving someone soon, Ezra Koenig of Vampire Weekend sings, name-checking a once-powerful art dealer who recently served a prison sentence for tax fraud. The song itself is a kind of musical mosaic, combining floating atmospherics that recall the bands Modern Vampires of the City with breakbeats and a lush, heavenly choir. LINDSAY ZOLADZ
Arooj Aftab, Raat Ki Rani: The arrangement is largely acoustic, yet theres almost a trip-hop undertow to Raat Ki Rani (Urdu for Queen of the Night) by Arooj Aftab, a Grammy-winning, culture-fusing Pakistani singer. One piano note repeats throughout; Asian percussion supplies deep, deliberate syncopation; and Maeve Gilchrists harp swirls between verses. Aftab sings about allure and desire in a long-breathed melody suffused with melancholy poise. JON PARELES
Lila Iké featuring H.E.R., He Loves Us Both: Polyamory gets complicated in this yearning reggae duet. Dont be too quick to judge, Jamaican singer Lila Iké urges; H.E.R. counters, You just keep lying to yourself. Neither of them wanted to lose a good thing just because, but thats all they agree on. The man in question never states his case. JON PARELES
Usher and Pheelz, Ruin: Usher embraces South African amapiano, with a tinge of Nigerian Afrobeats, in Ruin, a track produced by Pheelz, a Nigerian songwriter who adds a rap verse. Mixing accusation, plaint and humblebrag, Usher croons, You broke me and took your time with it/you gave me all these memories that I regret. But he also makes clear he has options: A different girl be on my line/Constantly be calling, every day I still decline. JON PARELES
Enrique Iglesias and Yotuel, Fría: In Fría (A Cold One), the denials and excuses keep coming from Enrique Iglesias, singing, and Yotuel, rapping, over three chords and a perfectly infectious beat set up by lean percussion and rhythm guitar. I only went out for a cold one, Iglesias insists. Your friends lied to you. Its so upbeat, they might get away with it. JON PARELES
Carin León and Kane Brown, The One (Pero No Como Yo): Country and Mexican music have long been close neighbors across the Texas border. Here, the regional Mexican superstar Carin León welcomes country singer Kane Brown for a bilingual duet that has León warning someone that no one will love her like him, while Brown proclaims, Whatever youre looking for in love/You know Im the one. Its a lean, acoustic Mexican polka underpinned by a sousaphone. JON PARELES
Hello Mary, 0%: Hello Mary, a three-woman New York City band, whipsaws through a raucous embrace of uncertainty that peaks with drummer-singer Stella Wave screaming, I dont know! I dont know! But within less than three minutes the track also jumps amid spindly indie-rock guitar chords, a bruising one-note bass riff and an unexpected dip into folky picking joined by a plinking vibraphone all while making a waltz sound feral. JON PARELES
Pearl Jam, React, Respond: Pearl Jams LP Dark Matter reinforces the bands longtime strengths: ferocious hard-rock riffs, neo-psychedelic guitar tangles and Eddie Vedders urgent moral compass. React, Respond hurtles ahead, with guitars blasting in unison and then ricocheting in stereo, as Vedder calls for unified, purposeful action, insisting, We could be fighting together/Instead of fighting ourselves. JON PARELES
Willow, Big Feelings: Willow embraces her outsize emotions in the full-tilt finale of her new album, Empathogen, which veers from her old pop-punk into jazz and prog-rock. Her voice sails over choppy piano chords as she announces her big feelings, and when she sings, Yes, I have problems, problems, she turns problems into a six-syllable arpeggio. JON PARELES
Julia Holter, Evening Mood: Julia Holter displays a light touch on the celestial shape-shifter Evening Mood. Twinkling keys and Holters soft vocals are accompanied by subtle percussion which, in part, features the filtered sounds of her daughters heartbeat as recorded on an ultrasound. LINDSAY ZOLADZ
Iron & Wine featuring Fiona Apple, All in Good Time: Somewhere between a hymn and a sea chantey, All in Good Time has Sam Beams earnest tenor and Fiona Apples huskiest alto trading lines about togetherness, estrangement, shared memories and lessons learned: You wore my ring until it didnt fit, Apple observes. Piano chords ring and strings swell as the songs two ex-partners harmonize to find, if not reconciliation, a mature sense of resignation. JON PARELES
Adrianne Lenker, Fool: Adrianne Lenker sings about connections They say when its right its right that can last or disappear: friendship, infatuation, romance, marriage, family. A six-beat web of picked, manipulated guitar tones are likely to bend, float in, stutter or vanish at any moment: as fragile and needed as the human companionship she longs for. JON PARELES
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.