It’s a new year, and the Consequence staff is already up to our eyeballs in fantastic music. January can be a mixed bag of releases — often peppered with big pop singles like last year’s long-charting “Flowers” by Miley Cyrus — but we spent January of 2024 more immersed in albums. From fresh voices like glass beach to deeply personal reflections from Boldy James and the best work yet from The Smile, this month ushered in plenty of new favorites destined to stay on rotation as the year progresses.
Listed in alphabetical order, here are what our Consequence writers and editors think are the best albums of January 2024. And for more records we can’t wait to get our ears on, check out our Most Anticipated Albums of 2024.
Benny the Butcher — Everybody Can’t Go

With Everybody Can’t Go, the most consistent member of the Griselda family is making his major label debut on Def Jam. His new “villain mode” includes a line seemingly supporting Trump, but if moral perfection was a prerequisite for hip-hop, record store shelves would be a lot more bare. Besides, his reportorial rapping is as sharp as anyone today, and bars like, “Me teary-eyed and gullible/ I lived it with a mother who struggled through addiction, I know every side of drug abuse,” reveal a real pain that so many of his peers shy away from sharing. — Wren Graves
Listen via Apple Music
Future Islands — People Who Aren’t There Anymore
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Listen via Apple Music
glass beach — plastic death
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<p>Though glass beach were initially hailed as torchbearers of fifth-wave emo, their second proper LP, <i data-stringify-type=)
Listen via Apple Music
Junodream — Pools of Colour
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<p>Every year since 2018, English quartet Junodream put out a new song or two, and occasionally an EP, like 2019’s <em>Isn’t It Lovely (To Be Alone)</em> and 2021’s <em>Travel Guide</em>. But with each expansive track, they were building out an impressive sonic repertoire that makes the release of their debut album, <em>Pools of Colour</em>, all the more satisfying.</p>
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Junodream’s sound is indebted to their late ’90s influences: The Bends-era Radiohead, Parachutes-era Coldplay, the dream pop majesty of Air, the melody-forward rock of Ride. But there’s something about Junodream’s ability to be both rousing and comforting at the same time that makes the songs on Pools of Colour stick. They’ve put out a lot of great tracks over the years, but the ones on Pools of Colour are their most ambitious and electrifying yet. — Paolo Ragusa
Listen via Apple Music