If anyone tells you 2024 was anything less than an absolute win for new music, they clearly spent the year with their head stuck in a bin. While the world outside might have been doing its best impression of a dumpster fire, our headphones have been blessed with an embarrassment of riches. From bright-young-things becoming even brighter to established faves finding new gears, the last twelve months have delivered more golden moments than we can count.
That’s where this list comes in. Over the next few days, we’ll be celebrating the very best tracks 2024 had to offer – from chart-destroying anthems to underground gems that deserve their moment in the spotlight. So grab your party hat, pour yourself something fizzy, and join us as we count down the defining songs of 2024.
100-91 | 90-81 | 80-71 | 70-61 | 60-51 | 50-41 | 40-31 | 30-21 | 20-11 | 10-1
80. Brògeal – Girl From NYC
2024 has been the year that a bubbling Celtic revival has burst into the mainstream, spearheaded by Irish acts like The Mary Wallopers and Lankum. Mixing this resurgent traditional sound with the sensibility of a scrappy indie band, Scotland’s Brògeal are completely unique. ‘Girl from NYC’ is a perfect encapsulation of what they do best – an original song which takes the best of table-thumping, toe-tapping Celtic music with pint-flinging, anthemic indie swagger. Comparisons with The Pogues are drawn whenever a band picks up an accordion, but by writing a banger as catchy as this, Brògeal prove themselves more than worthy of the association. JAKE HAWKES
79. Lauren Mayberry – Change Shapes
Pop transformations rarely arrive with such self-awareness as Lauren Mayberry’s ‘Change Shapes’. The track emerged this year as a sparkling piece of meta-commentary, turning perceived criticisms into pure pop alchemy. The CHVRCHES frontwoman’s transition to solo artist comes with a wink and a bite. When she delivers the track’s central declaration about shifting forms and mastering the rules, it’s with celebration. Matt Koma’s production provides the perfect accomplice; the track morphs with each listen, revealing hidden corners and unexpected turns. The result manages to be both pointed statement and pristine earworm. FELICTY NEWTON
78. Raye – Genesis
RAYE’s seven-minute epic feels like climbing into a time machine set for everywhere at once. ‘Genesis’ isn’t just long – it’s gloriously, defiantly excessive. While other artists trim their tracks to algorithm-friendly lengths, RAYE’s summer offering sprawls across three distinct acts like a West End musical having an existential crisis. The first movement drowns in orchestral anxiety, the second throws hip-hop punches at society’s demons, and the third becomes a twenties-style big band finale. Instead of backing down, she doubled down. The result isn’t just a song – it’s a middle finger to an industry obsessed with bite-sized content. FELICITY NEWTON
77. Mk.gee – Alesis
In a debut album with a unique power to captivate, ‘Alesis’ is the track that captures the specific magic of Mk.gee the most succinctly. Pushing boundaries and meticulously crafting something entirely unique, Mk.gee manages to rewrite the rules of guitar music. The initial percussion feels casual, but the distorted sounds and pleading lyrics offer a different perspective. Complex and evocative, it encompasses the haunting nature of Mk.gee’s sound with every raw vocal and lingering guitar slide. A window into ‘Two Star and The Dream Police’, ‘Alesis’ demonstrates their unparalleled ability to weave intricacies that stick. NEIVE MCCARTHY
76. Pale Waves – Perfume
Pale Waves have crafted something extraordinary with ‘Perfume’ – a track that transforms unguarded sentiment into radical expression. The Manchester quartet’s album-leading offering opens with a piercing cry that reverberates through the indie-rock firmament, channelling the ghost-echoes of The Cranberries and The Cure while carving out territory distinctly their own. When the distortion crashes in during the final minute, it’s not an escape hatch; it’s the sound of barriers crumbling. Heather Baron-Gracie’s lyrics about queer romance cut through typical pop platitudes, offering instead a raw invitation to remember love’s transformative power. FELICITY NEWTON
75. Taylor Swift – But Daddy I Love Him
‘But Daddy I Love Him’ feels like a song Taylor Swift has had bubbling inside for a long time. A whole career’s worth of having her dating life scrutinised finally came to a head in 2024, with this ‘The Tortured Poets Department’ standout sticking two fingers up to anyone whose ever had something to say about her relationship status. Swift goes back to her roots, the fairytale love stories and soaring choruses that made her famous, but this time injecting them with an unshakeable anger and a refusal to take any shit. ABIGAIL FIRTH
74. A. G. Cook – Out Of Time
2024 was a landmark year for the visionary producer and the PC music empire that he spent over a decade building. Not only did A.G Cook play a pivotal role in Charli XCX’s totemic ‘Brat’, he also released ‘Britpop’, a manifesto for everything he believes in. All encompassing in breadth and dynamics, it takes in electro, ambient, scuzzy indie rock and dreamy balladry, culminating in the dizzying hyper pop symphony ‘Out Of Time’. Nobody has meant more to what the future of music could be than A.G Cook, and this year he broke new boundaries in his continuing sonic odyssey. MARTYN YOUNG
73. Good Neighbours – Home
‘Home’ is the sort of track many thought couldn’t happen anymore. Good Neighbours haven’t just arrived – they’ve created their own moment. Strip away the incredible numbers and accolades and you’ll find a swooning love song that captures something pure and electric. Late 00s/early 10s indie-electronica shuffles and soars through a perfect 2:45 that feels both nostalgic and entirely of the moment. Where most tracks try to win you over, ‘Home’ simply exists as an instant classic – the kind of song that creates its own gravity. Some things just can’t be denied. JAMIE MUIR
72. Meghan Thee Stallion – Hiss
Before the big rap beef of the summer, Megan Thee Stallion kicked off the year with a single bar that rattled rap’s longest reigning queen. “These hoes mad at Megan’s Law” sent Nicki Minaj into a complete tailspin, thanks to the lyric’s nod to the US law that requires information about sex offenders to be public. But all drama aside, ‘HISS’ was a striking comeback, leading the rollout for her self-titled 2024 album. The relentless rounds of bars are so intense it’s impossible to tune out until she’s finished. When Nicki hit back, she’d never win; ‘HISS’ was bulletproof. ABIGAIL FIRTH
71. The Japanese House – 🙂
The Japanese House’s ‘:)’ began as a private joke, a frenzied declaration fired off to a Tinder match. That impulsive moment has turned into a time capsule preserving the exact millisecond before love’s freefall begins. Penned in that electric liminal space between digital connection and physical meeting, it captures the possibility of pre-love with remarkable precision. What transforms ‘:)’ from charming accident to minor miracle is its inadvertent prescience — Amber Bain wrote these words before meeting her now-fiancée, unknowingly sketching the blueprint of her own future happiness. Many romantic tracks reflect backwards on love, but ‘:)’ freezes time at the precise instant before the story begins. FELICITY NEWTON
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