Debuts that were worth the wait, intensely personal records about grief, deliberately impersonal exercises in craft, latter-day career classics its difficult to draw sweeping conclusions about the releases that have made NMEs mid-year report of the best Australian records of the year to date.
We have six more months left in the year and many more incredible releases left to come, but lets celebrate what we have right now. Here are the 15 best Aussie albums of 2022 so far.
Stank face moments abound in Foreign Language, the debut mixtape by Korean Australian hip-hop mavericks 1300. Nerdie and pokari.sweats production is bassy, bold and bright but never predictable witness the deep groove and AutoTuned melodies of UMUM, or the chiming callback to Biggie on Rocksta.
Hopscotching all over these chaotic confections are rappers rako, goyo and DALI HART, who have swag in spades and gleefully shit-talk their haters in both English and Korean. Fuelling their motor-mouthed flows are the thrill of landing an audacious bar and the sheer joy of rapping circles around others no wonder Foreign Language is such an infectious listen. Karen Gwee
1300s Foreign Language is out now.
Few bands make it to LP7 with the same energy or passion they had in the good ol days, but sporting their stickiest hooks, tightest playing and sharpest songwriting, Weirder & Weirder is Ball Park Musics best record yet.
The band wrote it at their lowest point, yet its inescapably upbeat, and although it landed at the start of a brutal winter, it feels tailor-made for summer festivals, road trips and beaches. Even its subtlest flourishes like the grit spiking the otherwise beautiful pop melodies, or the twinkly atmospherics that add an extra dash of magic to the soundscape make Weirder & Weirder a home run for Ball Park Music. Ellie Robinson
Ball Park Musics Weirder & Weirder is out now via Prawn Records.
Of all 2022s debut albums, Body Types had the most scenic route. A half-decade of gigging and EPs had already established the band as a compelling force of Sydney indie music, meaning that Everything Is Dangerous But Nothings Surprising wasnt the proving ground most debuts are.
Perhaps whats most interesting, then, is just how big the band are swinging here. The Charm is career-best throat-shredding fury, Sex & Rage lives up to its title and the six-minute slow-burn of An Animal is completely mesmerising. They may have taken their time, but one thing is perfectly clear: Body Type arent fucking around. David James Young
Body Types Everything Is Dangerous But Nothings Surprising is out now via Poison City Records.
Its been four years since Camp Cope taught us How To Socialise & Make Friends and now theyre back, older, wiser and more mellow than before. Running With The Hurricane is a glorious example of a band stripping back their hard exterior and welcoming us into their new sound.
The trio havent discarded their power emo roots entirely, but the guitars are softer and the drums less commanding. Georgia Maqs lyricism has also become more poignant and introspective, giving the singer space to showcase her stunning vocals on The Screaming Planet and One Wink At A Time. Greta Brereton
Camp Copes Running With The Hurricane is out now via Poison City Records.
Self-aware lyricism meets sick EDM production on Tilt, an album of pure unhinged and untethered hedonism delivered with the unique charm that has become synonymous with Confidence Man and Confidence Man only.
To make an album sound like it doesnt care at all is a tricky task that requires a sharp ear for sound and aesthetic. Luckily, Confidence Man are a band whose drawcard is their ability to revel in the gleefully raucous facets of dance pop and not take things too seriously. They prove across its 12 tracks that theyre sharper than ever and more importantly, their vision for their output is unshakeable. Sosefina Fuamoli
Confidence Mans Tilt is out now via I OH YOU.
The DJ/producers artist album can be predictable, even boring: cut banging beats, bring in big-name vocalists, boom. But, with Palaces, Flume switches things up. Harley Streten conceptualised Palaces while staying in New South Wales riverlands and its a sonic retreat thats alternately ravey and ambient.
Led by a celestial Caroline Polachek, the hyper-glitch Sirens surreally manifests the pandemics dystopian dread, while MAY-A shines on the baile funk hit Say Nothing. Flume also collaborates with Damon Albarn on the meditative title track, which single-handedly gives Gorillazs comeback Humanz a run for its money. Palaces shows Flumes uncanny ability to read a crowd and the culture. Cyclone Wehner
Flumes Palaces is out now via Future Classic.
Gang of Youths have made their Achtung Baby. Their third album Angel In Realtime. presents a matured and refined version of the band and their sound, fusing influences from time spent in the UK Britpop, UK garage and drumnbass with sounds of Oceania that frontman David Leaupepe collected on his journey to reconnect with his Samoan heritage in the wake of his fathers death.
This album is about grief, but also rediscovery and celebration, matching the bands stadium-sized rock to Leaupepes own personal evolution. Sosefina Fuamoli
Gang of Youths Angel In Realtime. is out now via Sony Music Australia.
Hatchie is purposeful and assured on Giving The World Away. In her previous material, including 2019 debut album, Keepsake, she chronicled ill-fated romanic liaisons. But this new record is about self-knowledge, Harriette Pilbeam reliving mental health struggles in the resounding single Quicksand.
For the album cover, Hatchie cosplays as Claire Danes angelic Juliet from Baz Luhrmanns Romeo + Juliet. The cult 90s soundtrack could well have been a sonic touchstone. Embracing heavier guitar, synths and percussion, Hatchie sheds shoegaze nostalgia, instead hybridising industrial, grunge and electronica. Imaginative and regenerative, Giving The World Away finds Hatchie spreading her wings. Cyclone Wehner
Hatchies Giving The World Away is out now via Secretly Canadian & Ivy League Records.
Jaguar Jonzes Bunny Mode is the sound of trauma being exorcised on the dancefloor. You couldve destroyed me, but then I got loud, Deena Lynch declares over staccato synths that owe as much to Alison Goldfrapp as Trent Reznor.
From incandescent rockers (see Punchline) to stadium-ready ballads (Little Fires), Jaguar Jonze has crafted an unpredictable electro-pop album that shows off her versatility as a songwriter, her voice snapping easily from a snarl to a whisper. Bunny Mode is a call to arms and a defiant refusal to be cowed into silence. Chris Lewis
Jaguar Jonzes Bunny Mode is out now via Nettwerk.
Playing together since the members not-so-distant early teens, The Lazy Eyes flex that longstanding rapport all over their confident and self-produced debut album. The four Sydneysiders settle into a pillowy groove while exploring the competing hues of psychedelias sonic rainbow. Theyre not in any rush either, as heard on six-plus-minute voyages like The Seaside and Wheres My Brain???.
Tempering King Gizz-esque jams with the dreamy depth of Tame Impala, The Lazy Eyes dish up intense freakouts naturally alongside the sweetest and most optimistic of melodies. This psych-pop isnt confined to past glories rather, it has infinite room to grow. Doug Wallen
The Lazy Eyes Songbook is out now.
Mallrat and earnest songwriting go hand in hand. Grace Shaw has long had the ability to take the ups and downs of adolescence and weave them into relatable, bright and catchy pop numbers that soundtrack the Australian teenage experience.
We get the same lyrical honesty on Butterfly Blue, but Mallrat is older now, and its reflected in the maturity of her music. Though some songs still bottle that childlike innocence (Wish On An Eyelash and Butterfly Blue), she exudes a newfound vulnerability and contemplative edge, baring it all in Arms Length and Im Not My Body, Its Mine. Greta Brereton
Mallrats Butterfly Blue is out now via Dew Process.
Jake Webbs ghosts are far more than mere spectres. On the Perth art-pop polymaths fourth album a former lover played by Stella Donnelly demands recognition on Proof, the planets plight intrudes on Something to Worry About, while Neon Cheap suggests the seductively sharp edge of social media.
With an eclectic palette of jagged synths and jinking rhythms, these songs are invocations that pivot between clarity and confusion so that they form their own reality. Dispensing with boundaries, Webb makes the unknown tactile. Hes called the album his least personal record yet, but these spirits bear his distinct fingerprints at every turn. Craig Mathieson
Methyl Ethels Are You Haunted? is out now via Future Classic.
Purely on premise, Partner Look could have been dismissed as too cutesy: two musician couples combining to create a band named after identical dressing. But their debut album is a perfect storm of indie-rock pedigree (the band sport members from Cool Sounds and The Ocean Party) and the exciting premise of a blank slate to work with.
With a sonic spectrum that ranges from steadily-building jangle-pop (Partner Look) to Play School whimsy (Grasshopper), By The Book revels in its charm and doesnt hide its dorkiness in order to score cred points. And really, why should it? David James Young
Partner Looks By The Book is out now via Spunk Records.
The world is run by people who show up, and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever are as consistent as a grandfather clock. The Melbourne quintets third album Endless Rooms arrives bang on time with a healthy advancement of their jangly guitar sound courtesy of more overt political themes (Tidal River) and winding, cinematic touches (My Echo).
Somehow, the triple threat vocals of Fran Keaney, Tom Russo and Joe White never crowd each other. On The Way It Shatters, White steps forward and scathingly asks If you were on the boat, would you turn the other way? in a neat extension on the forward-thinking lines from previous cuts (Mainland). Mikey Cahill
Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fevers Endless Rooms is out now via Sub Pop Records.
Romero arrive fully formed on this head rush of a debut album. Bolstering anxious proto-punk momentum with Alanna Olivers soul-trained vocal swagger she once sang in a Blues Brothers tribute act the Melbourne five-piece joyfully split the difference between The Strokes and Sheer Mag.
For a band that rarely slows down to catch its breath (especially live), its surprising that the best song here might just be Halfway Out the Door, a hook-riddled ballad halfway through the tracklist. Its also the clearest showcase of Olivers casually passionate delivery, which promises a crossover appeal well beyond even those gloriously scuffed guitar runs. Doug Wallen
Romeros Turn It On! is out now via Cool Death Records & Feel It Records.
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The 15 best Australian albums of 2022 so far - NME
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