Pop music was under no circumstances protected this yr from the encroachments of an AI business decided to slop-ify the whole lot it will possibly. But the proliferation of nice songs — written, carried out and savored by folks — raised the hope that each one is just not misplaced. Listed here are the 25 better of 2025.
Our picks for this yr’s finest in arts and leisure.
1. Dangerous Bunny, “Baile Inolvidable” Dangerous Bunny has made it clear: Every part he does is tied to Puerto Rico. Right here, in what he’s dubbed “Benito’s take on salsa,” he sings in regards to the dance of a lifetime over an orchestra of synthesizers, congas, trumpets and an remoted piano — a six-minute ode to the island’s roots and affect on the style. And similar to that, salsa has develop into cool as soon as once more. — Cerys Davies
2. Karol G, “Ivonny Bonita”Karol’s history-minded, history-making “Tropicoqueta” LP lovingly combs by way of the generations of Latin music that made her a world famous person. “Ivonny Bonita” splits the distinction between previous and current, with a come-hither bachata swish over Pharrell-produced bass hums. — August Brown
3. Chappell Roan, “The Subway”The vocal efficiency of the yr. — Mikael Wooden
4. Justin Bieber, “Yukon” Bieber won’t ever escape the ability of his high-pitched voice, whether or not he’s 15 years outdated singing “One Time” or 31 on this meditation on his favourite SUV. — C.D.
5. Doja Cat, “Jealous Type”’80s-pop cosplay so convincing that folk in 2025 forgot to make it an actual hit. — M.W.
6. Dijon, “Higher!”Take a completely exultant R&B monitor, then let a cat stroll all around the punch-in triggers on the combination console. — A.B.
7. Addison Rae, “Fame Is a Gun”Wish to know the way this TikToker grew to become an web It lady in a single day? She spells it out clearly on this pop-star manifesto. — C.D.
8. Rosalía, “La Rumba del Perdón”Rosalía’s album “Lux” looks like Ken Russell’s “The Devils”: A girl possessed of celestial skills fights it out with the god who deserted her. It’ll go down with knotty LPs by Tori Amos and Fiona Apple that contort classical traditions to tangled, private ends, and this monitor sums up her mission superbly. — A.B.
9. Miley Cyrus, “End of the World”A disco queen shoegazes into the void. — M.W.
10. Olivia Dean, “Man I Need”She desires to bounce with anyone (who satisfies her). — M.W.
11. Sofia Isella, “Out in the Garden”“Evil’s genetics will trap you in flesh … Blood escaping like it hates being inside me.” — A.B.
12. Kehlani, “Folded”The perfect R&B is at all times rooted within the artwork of craving. — C.D.
13. Charlie Puth, “Changes”The lengthy tail of “Sob Rock.” — M.W.
14. Drake and PartyNextDoor that includes Yebba, “Die Trying”For proof of idea, examine the unauthorized SoundCloud mash-up with Morgan Wallen’s “Heartless.” — M.W.
15. Amaarae that includes PinkPantheress, “Kiss Me Thru The Phone pt 2”They at all times say the sequel is rarely pretty much as good as the primary one. On this homage to Y2K membership music, Amaarae and PinkPantheress beg to vary. — C.D.
16. Tate McRae, “Sports Car”Whereas Timbaland is off making AI nonsense, McRae’s sultry single clatters like his finest 2006 work. — A.B.
17. Huntr/x, “Golden”Says it goes up, and that’s what it does. — M.W.
18. Hayley Williams, “Parachute” Being angsty has by no means not been cool. If there have been any doubt, although, Williams clears it up with this infuriated story of betrayal. — C.D.
19. Taylor Swift, “Ruin the Friendship”The storyteller lives. — M.W.
20. Maruja, “Look Down on Us”Ten virtuosic minutes that veer from filthy, noise-decayed bass and hardcore circle-pitting to exalted cosmic jazz and a gasping sentiment that nearly, possibly resembles hope for our dismal current. — A.B.
21. Clipse, “So Be It”“Calabasas took your b— and your pride in front of me” is a hall-of-fame L.A. insult. — A.B.
22. FKA Twigs, “Hard” Can’t wait to listen to this sweaty electro earworm at a rave underneath L.A.’s sixth Road Bridge. — C.D.
23. Sombr, “12 to 12”The zoomer marriage ceremony dance-floor anthem of 2035. — A.B.
24. Ella Langley, “Choosin’ Texas”“He always loved ‘Amarillo by Morning’ / I should’ve taken that as a warning.” — M.W.
25. Shelly, “Cross Your Mind” To listen to that Clairo too is chasing the glory days of being a 17-year-old in suburbia — as heard on this single by her outdated band Shelly — is proof that bed room pop won’t ever die. — C.D.

