Updated March 12, 2024 at 1:57 PM ET
and loom so large these days that it's easy to overlook the overwhelming amount of good music headed our way over the next three months. So we enlisted a big, round number to do the heavy lifting: 50 new albums out during spring 2024 that have us almost as excited as Cowboy Carter and The Tortured Poets Department.
If you're more of a podcast person, you can listen to 's discuss a dozen or so of these releases . (You won't go wrong by following the show on and .)

Jlin
Akoma
Planet Mu
March 22
The Pulitzer Prize-nominated electronic musician returns with an thorny album featuring some living legend collaborators: , and . The rarefied air hasn't changed her, though — the Gary, Ind., native names the penultimate track here after her grannie's cherry pie. —Otis Hart

Julia Holter
Something in the Room She Moves
Domino
March 22
Fluidity is the key force within this album from perhaps our most ambitious art-pop experimentalist. sought to create something akin to "the body's internal sound world," discovering a space that is just as mutable. —Sheldon Pearce

SiR
Heavy
TDE
March 22
The world has gotten undoubtedly heavier since TDE's dropped his last full-length album in 2019. In the five years of politics, pandemics, culture shifts and over-stimulation on all fronts, one of Inglewood's most reliable serves up an antidote to apathy. With features from , and more, Heavy holds recipes for logging off, lucking out and loving deep. —Sidney Madden

Tyla
TYLA
Epic
March 22
Fresh off winning her first Grammy in the inaugural category of best Africa music performance for the viral hit "Water," is South Africa's popiano phenom ready to move from being a TikTok sensation to a major name in Africa's robust music scene with her self-titled debut. —Sidney Madden

Waxahatchee
Tigers Blood
ANTI-
March 22
Singer-songwriter Katie Crutchfield's voice is the centerpiece of her music as . It's shaky in a way that feels resilient. She's talked a lot about her sobriety over the last few years, about how sometimes there's this fear when you're getting sober that you're going to lose your muse. For Crutchfield, it's been the exact opposite. She's finding herself on Tigers Blood. You can hear the confidence shining through. —Raina Douris, World Cafe

Timo Andres
The Blind Banister
Nonesuch
March 22
Finally, we get a recording of ' piano concerto, The Blind Banister, shortlisted for a Pulitzer in 2016, with the composer at the keys. That the album contains the cinematic cello concerto Upstate Obscura, with Inbal Segev, makes it worth the wait. —Tom Huizenga

C.P.E. Bach
Symphonies - From Berlin to Hamburg
Harmonia Mundi
March 22
A crackling survey of symphonies from 's most innovative son proves that 's startling, unpredictable music — which prefigures ideas would apply 30 years later — sounds as fresh as ever in the hands of the . —Tom Huizenga

Alice Coltrane
The Carnegie Hall Concert
Impulse!
March 22
This revelatory live recording from 1971, available in full for the first time, captures on both piano and harp, leading an incantatory group with two saxophonists, two bassists and two drummers. (For a sense of what we're dealing with, consider that the saxophonists are and .) Long before the term "spiritual jazz" was marketing copy, this music positively hums with a higher vibration. —Nate Chinen, WRTI

Rosie Tucker
UTOPIA NOW!
Sentimental
March 22
Self-deprecatory, pop-punk-ish indie rock for the most anxious among us. 's been at this a minute, but early singles for their fourth album have demonstrated a wit and humor smartly entangled in ridiculously catchy pop songs. —Lars Gotrich

Aoife O'Donovan
All My Friends
Yep Roc
March 22
The Grammy-winning singer-songwriter surveys the history of women's rights in America, with the women's suffrage movement as a central inspiration, in this expansive set featuring her friends — among others, , Sierra Hull and 's husband, Eric Jacobsen, music director of both the Virginia Symphony Orchestra and the Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra. —Ann Powers

Future and Metro Boomin
We Don't Trust You
Epic
March 22 & April 12
's new project with fellow ATLian (who produced the rapper's halcyon hits "Mask Off" and "Jumpman") couldn't be confined to a single album. The duo have worked together on and off since Metro's first official production 11 years ago, but this pair will mark their first album-length collaboration since 2015. —Otis Hart

µþ±ð²â´Ç²Ô³¦Ã©
act ii: COWBOY CARTER
Parkwood/Columbia
March 29
µþ±ð²â´Ç²Ô³¦Ã©'s been tellin' us she's country for a while; the world's finally listening. "TEXAS HOLD 'EM" debuted at No. 1 on the country chart, causing all kinds of ruckus, and "16 CARRIAGES" is a country ballad that touches on the same themes as Lemonade's "Daddy Lessons," itself a clue of what was to come. Will the rest of act ii channel the same sound? We'll find out. —Lars Gotrich

Reyna Tropical
²Ñ²¹±ô±ð²µ°ùò¹
Psychic Hotline
March 29
Guitarist and songwriter lost her musical partner, Nectali "Sumo" DÃaz, in 2022 while they were making ²Ñ²¹±ô±ð²µ°ùò¹ (which translates roughly to joy and sorrow), but she continued to work on the album using the beats that he'd produced. The result is at turns tranquil, breezy ... even danceable, and gorgeously encapsulates the complex emotion of its title. —Raina Douris, World Cafe

Wisp
Pandora EP
Interscope
April 5
To call a TikTok shoegazer is a little unfair, but that platform is where the artist found her devoted audience. The 19-year-old musician's songs follow a familiar formula — wobbly guitar effects, shimmering distortion, coo'd vocals — but feel cool to the touch. Pandora is Wisp's debut EP. —Lars Gotrich

Fabiana Palladino
Fabiana Palladino
XL Recordings/Paul Institute
April 5
Fabiana Palladino's bona fides are unimpeachable. She's the daughter of revered bassist and close confidant of the reclusive Jai Paul. She cut her teeth working as a session musician with and , but that's just prologue now. This late-night collection of yearning R&B, which Fabiana produced herself over several years, will have no trouble entrancing an audience all on its own. —Otis Hart

Pernice Brothers
Who Will You Believe
New West
April 5
is a workhorse of a songwriter who delivers hard truths with the softest of whispers. Previous descriptors of his classic American pop music (lush, winsome, devastating) still apply, but these songs reflect a world crumbling down even as we pick up the pieces. guests. —Lars Gotrich

Vampire Weekend
Only God Was Above Us
Columbia
April 5
are doing that thing that's so hard to do when you release a long-awaited album, which is sound like yourself, but do something just different enough to make it feel like it isn't reheated old stuff. The rhythms are kind of weird. It feels fuzzier. It's more discordant. There's a griminess to it. It's as if those fresh-faced boys went away in 2019 and came back with a 5 o'clock shadow. —Raina Douris, World Cafe

Maya Beiser
In C
Islandia Music
April 5
Armed with a looping machine and a pair of percussionists, the intrepid cellist offers a joyful and meditative rendition of 's minimalist milestone, In C, which celebrates its 60th anniversary this year. —Tom Huizenga

Phosphorescent
Revelator
Verve
April 5
's Matthew Houck has said in interviews how hard he finds it to make music, and that sometimes he's thought that he wouldn't make another record. And then comes along Revelator, a beautiful, thoughtful album that sounds like the farthest thing from writer's block. —Raina Douris, World Cafe

Vegyn
The Road to Hell is Paved with Good Intentions
PLZ Make It Ruins
April 5
The British producer (and associate) has been toying with us over the past few years, releasing unwieldy albums packed with tracks only occasionally exceeding 2 minutes. On The Road to Hell is Paved with Good Intentions, he's finally ready (or is it willing?) to join the ranks of and as a trafficker of anthemic breakbeat pop. —Otis Hart

Khruangbin
A La Sala
Dead Oceans
April 5
The Houston lo-fi funk trio is set to return with 12 new Shazam-able jams for springtime soirées ... and coffee shops ... and outdoor malls. You get the point: 's chill amalgam of and sounds great just about everywhere, and A La Sala picks up right where they left off. —Otis Hart

Young Miko
att.
The Wave Music Group
April 5
Young Miko splashed on to the Latin trap scene in 2021 with a sultry voice and sapphic, bilingual bars. After her 2022 EP, Trap Kitty, the 25-year-old ascended to the reggaeton mainstream with a string of collaborations, including a bellaca moment alongside and . Her debut album, att. , is expected to cement Miko's effortless swag and unapologetically queer lyricism as one of the most important voices in Latin music today. —Isabella Gomez Sarmiento

Melissa Aldana
Echoes of the Inner Prophet
Blue Note
April 5
Tenor saxophonist has spent the last decade or so deepening her focus as a composer and bandleader in the modern jazz mainstream. Here she takes another stride forward, leading a quintet with , her producer and co-conspirator, on guitar and electronic effects. —Nate Chinen, WRTI

girl in red
I'm Doing It Again Baby!
Columbia
April 12
The stakes may have seemed high for after the success of 2021's debut, If I Could Make It Go Quiet. But after signing with a major label and opening for Taylor Swift's Eras tour, the Norwegian singer is coming back with a sophomore album that's every bit as joyful and animated, with songs that further refine her addictive mix of pop and rock. —Robin Hilton

Maggie Rogers
Don't Forget Me
Capitol
April 12
If 2022's Surrender was a joyfully dense, workshopped pop affair, ' Don't Forget Me feels like a well-loved pair of jeans. The album was written over five days; the recordings lean into a first-thought-best-thought spirit, favoring first takes over fussy overdubs. It's a mode that hearkens back to Rogers' earliest days, yet maintains the sophistication she's cultivated since. —Lars Gotrich

Shabaka
Perceive its Beauty, Acknowledge its Grace
Impulse!
April 12
The saxophonist takes up a variety of flutes for a Zen experience that boasts input from a stellar ensemble cast: , , , , , , Miguel Atwood-Ferguson, , and more. All in service to music of epiphany. —Sheldon Pearce

METZ
Up On Gravity Hill
Sub Pop
April 12
The three guys in the Toronto-based have been making thunderous, chaotic rock for more than 15 years, leaving audiences slack-jawed in awe of chest-rattling live shows that feel like end-times. But for their fifth full-length studio album, they pair up with composer and violinist for the trio's most melodic and hookiest release yet. —Robin Hilton

Still House Plants
If I don't make it, I love u
Bison
April 12
' stilted and jilted music is just askew from what's happening in London's vibrant post-punk scene. On If I don't make it, I love u, the trio slows its roll for something more soulful, yet nevertheless unsteady. —Lars Gotrich

Meshell Ndegeocello
Red Hot & Ra - The Magic City
Red Hot
April 12
The remarkable, shapeshifting bassist and visionary takes on the interplanetary works of with a stacked list of jazz luminaries (Deantoni Parks, , and current Arkestra bandleader Marshall Allen) and guest vocalists (, Kenita Miller). —Lars Gotrich

Taylor Swift
The Tortured Poets Department
Republic
April 19
You'd be forgiven if you couldn't keep up with Taylor Swift's pace. Just in the last five years, she has released eight albums — four of them re-recordings — toured the world and released a box office-shattering concert film. She does not sleep. The Tortured Poets Department reportedly features and , but we know little beyond song titles right now. —Lars Gotrich

T Bone Burnett
The Other Side
Verve Forecast
April 19
The Americana artist/producer/mastermind returns with his first solo singer-songwriter album in almost two decades, inspired by his purchase of some new guitars that, he's said, seemed to speak for themselves. , and add their voices to the mix. —Ann Powers

Cadence Weapon
ROLLERCOASTER
MNRK
April 19
Toronto rapper (aka Rollie Pemberton) is back with his first album since winning the 2021 Polaris Prize, which is kind of like Canada's version of Britain's Mercury Prize. His collaborators this time around include indie rock star , electronic producers Jacques Greene and and, as Pemberton puts it, "fellow Black weirdos." —Raina Douris, World Cafe

Marta Sánchez Trio
Perpetual Void
Intakt
April 19
Marta Sánchez has already distinguished herself as a pianist and small-group composer with a jazz language informed by her native Madrid. This is her first trio album — and a stunner, featuring the full commitment of Christopher Tordini on bass and Savannah Harris on drums. —Nate Chinen, WRTI

Iron & Wine
Light Verse
Sub Pop
April 26
Much of 's work has followed a common trajectory for bands that enjoy more commercial success, becoming more polished over the years with pristine production. But the early singles (including one with ) from the group's seventh full-length, Light Verse, show and company getting back to Iron & Wine's roots, a little scruffier and warmer, as though they grew out of the earth instead of a studio. —Robin Hilton

John Adams
Girls of the Golden West
Nonesuch
April 26
' opera about the California gold rush is no happy-go-lucky story of miners panning for shiny nuggets. It's a clear-eyed, often bleak, view of American greed and racism that, in this debut recording, stars the magnificent . —Tom Huizenga

Inter Arma
New Heaven
Relapse
April 26
You can toss any number of adjectives at the Richmond metal band — psychedelic, progressive, dissonant, sludgy, doomy — but few acts capture the sublime wonder and terror that evokes. Metal with an intense curiosity. —Lars Gotrich

Kyshona
Legacy
Soundly
April 26
(pronounced kuh-SHAUN-uh) is a new name to the national stage, but that's only because the roots musician is so focused on her local community in Nashville. She got her start writing songs as a music therapist at mental health and rehabilitation facilities, and that heartfelt empathy is evident on Legacy, an inspiring collection of gospel, folk and blues. —Otis Hart

Elkka
Prism of Pleasure
Ninja Tune
May 3
After a string of excellent EPs, the London-based electronic producer and DJ known for her wildly fun, bubbly dance music (check out last year's thumper "") finally releases her debut album. —Hazel Cills

Jessica Pratt
Here in the Pitch
Mexican Summer
May 3
The elusive artist is known for her warm, spell-binding folk music that sounds like it time-traveled out of obscurity from the 1970s into present day (). In May, she's set to release her fourth album and first in five years. —Hazel Cills

Kamasi Washington
Fearless Movement
Young
May 3
The sax titan is calling this a "dance album," though not in the traditional sense. He longs to evoke movement as a declaration of the soul. Just as well: Listening to the eight-minute "Prologue," there seems to be a kinetic energy coursing through the music. —Sheldon Pearce

Mdou Moctar
Funeral for Justice
Matador
May 3
Following the colossal triumph of Afrique Victime, the Nigerien band fronted by Tuareg guitarist Mahamadou Souleymane ups the ante on an album that is even more furious and defiantly political than its predecessor. —Sheldon Pearce

Amen Dunes
Death Jokes
Sub Pop
May 10
The Damon McMahon project's first album on Sub Pop and first album since 2018's Freedom considers American isolationism. Inspired by , 's Donuts and UK garage, it brings drum programming and sampling to the realm in search of a less violent, more connected way of being. —Sheldon Pearce

I. Jordan
I Am Jordan
Ninja Tune
May 10
The English producer I. Jordan's energetic, house-inspired dance music has made them one of the genre's most exciting names to watch since their 2019 debut EP, DNT STP MY LV. That renown is sure to continue with their debut album, described as a project dedicated to the joy they feel living as a trans person. —Hazel Cills

Yaya Bey
Ten Fold
Big Dada
May 10
One of the most calculating soul artists working returns after a welcome breakthrough with an album that is less thematic than previous work but no less thoughtful. Featuring production from 's Corey Fonville, drummer Karriem Riggins, DJs Jay Daniel and Boston Chery, the record is as groovy as it is expressive. —Sheldon Pearce

Ron Miles
Old Main Chapel
Blue Note
May 10
, a cornetist and composer fiercely admired in jazz circles,, at 58. So any scrap of unheard music is precious — but especially something like this, a 2011 live date with two of his closest compatriots, guitarist and drummer. —Nate Chinen, WRTI

Beth Gibbons
Lives Outgrown
Domino
May 17
The singer with a singular voice returns with her first official solo album, a gorgeous, moody reflection on what life looks like when you've got more years behind you than you have ahead. Gibbons sees no silver lining or simple solutions for undoing the march of time but offers one piece of advice: Be brave. —Robin Hilton

Kaia Kater
Strange Medicine
Free Dirt
May 17
One of Americana's most thoughtful and inventive artists returns after six years with a meditation on those who've survived and thrived against marginalization and oppression. Guests include , and 's Canadian spiritual sister, . —Ann Powers

Machinedrum
3FOR82
Ninja Tune
May 24
Seeking inspiration in Joshua Tree, the electronic producer Travis Stewart emerged from a moment of clarity with a new album that spans the dance spectrum. The project's wide-ranging yet refined collaborators (, , ) hints at its architect's discriminating taste. —Sheldon Pearce

Jon Muq
Flying Away
Easy Eye Sounds
May 31
From his youth busking on the streets of Kampala, Uganda, through time spent honing his soulful sound on a Norwegian cruise ship and establishing himself in Austin, Jon Muq has developed a globally aware soul sound perfected here with ' behind the boards. —Ann Powers

Goat Girl
Below the Waste
Rough Trade
June 7
Co-produced with John Spud Murphy ('s producer and "fifth member") and recorded at Hellfire Studios in Ireland, this follow-up to 2021's On All Fours promises more soothing noise from the London post-punks. Take, as an offering, "ride around," which produces splendor out of sludge. —Sheldon Pearce

Charli XCX
brat
Atlantic
Release date TBD
The English pop provocateur follows up her critically acclaimed, 2022 album Crash with the club-inspired brat, out sometime in the next three months. And by the sound of the fun lead single "Von dutch," it sounds like a club built for debauchery. —Hazel Cills

Angélica Garcia
Gemelo
Partisan
release date TBD
A master of honoring identity, tangled lineages and spiritual belonging, is always on a quest to write — and sing — about where she comes from. Four years since her LP Cha Cha Palace dug its heels into her Salvadoran Mexican roots in east Los Angeles, Garcia returns with a meditation into her deepest self yet. —Isabella Gomez Sarmiento
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