2014 was another phenomenal year for music, illuminating darkness when it often seemed that the only light was from buildings burning in Ferguson, Missouri. Veterans like U2, Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty, Jackson Browne and Leonard Cohen were showing the youngsters how it’s done, but classic rock was being revived in more unlikely ways too: the Eighties impressionist guitar choogle of the War on Drugs, Ought’s word-drunk post-punk, Perfume Genius’ arty glam rock and Eric Church’s country arena-rock.
The year was dominated on nearly every other front by young women: Charli XCX’s reinvention of punk-pop, Miranda Lambert’s Nashville platinum-blonde ambition, St. Vincent’s indie-rock apotheosis, FKA Twigs’ haunting avant-R&B and, above all, Taylor Swift’s unstoppable pop juggernaut. The politically charged hip-hop of Public Enemy found a new-school parallel in Run the Jewels, the storytelling Los Angeles breeze of Dr. Dre found new life in YG and Flying Lotus took rhymes and beats into spectacularly abstract territory. Here’s 50 albums that we wouldn’t turn down.