As 2025 comes to a close, we here at Portland Radio Project are reflecting on some of the our favorite releases from the year!
Here are some of our album (and music-related!) picks down below. Happy New Year!
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Patrick, host of The Mixtape (Thursdays from 7-9 PM)

The Optdemics – The Atom Complex: The Optdemics are a great new Portland band. The Atom Complex is their debut record. The vibe of the record is a beautiful blend of garage psych and folkie rock. The lyrics are stories that captivate the listening ear. This is another great record from Andy Giegerich and Braxeling Records. Their whole catalog is well worth checking out.

Boleros Psicodelicos II – Adrian Quesada: This is yet another great record from Adrian Quesada. Any band or record he is part of is a must for the collection. From Black Pumas to his solo projects, the musicianship, the funky grooves and production is always incredible. This record, which is the follow-up from his first Boleros Psicodelicos record, has a beautiful latin feel coupled with 60’s psych vibe that keeps the listener coming back for listen after listen.

Sad and Beautiful World – Mavis Staples: Mavis continues to make one incredible record after another. This new record is a call to keep fighting, taking care of each other and to be strong in these turbulent times. The album is filled with collaborations with the likes of Buddy Guy, Jeff Tweedy, Bonnie Raitt and many others. Mavis brings together a collection of songs that makes us want to embrace family, to believe in the power of each other and to believe in the power of possibility. We are all better off with Mavis in our lives!

Planting By The Signs – S.G. Goodman: This new record from S.G. Goodman is so good. The more you listen to it, the better it gets. Goodman weaves thought provoking stories of love, loss, grief and redemption with a textured musical landscape that is captivating. Her Portland show this year was tremendous and showed the power of her music and lyrics. This is an album that draws you in and makes it hard to put other records on!
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In late August Paramore’s lead singer Haley Williams released stellar “Ego Death at a Bachelorette Party.” It’s an astonishing collection of great tracks sure to enjoy a long shelf life and catapult her career trajectory.
Once upon a time, in 2003 at the tender age of 14, Williams signed a contract with Atlantic Records. It required six albums with her band Paramore. The contract also required two solo albums. Today she’s the only original member remaining.
Twenty years later – having lived up to her end of the deal – Williams is like the proverbial butterfly emerging from its cocoon. We feel this both through her vocals (that range!), and the entire album’s fresh, freewheeling feel.
The new release – 20 tracks! – is chock-full of ace, self-assured songwriting. Co-written with friend and fellow musician Daniel James, topics range from depression and loss, to love, denouncing religion (“True Believer”), and her time with Paramore (“Glum”).
Arrangements fall into rock (“Mirtazapine” “Hard”), alt-rock (“True Believer” “Parachute”) pop-rock (“Ice in My OJ”) and indie-pop (“Whim”) genres, and no two songs sound alike. Williams released “Ego Death” on her own label, “Post Atlantic.”
Catchy, clever “Love Me Different” seems destined for radio airwaves. Buoyant “Disappearing Man” with its bright chords and layered vocals recalls The Beatles’ “Rubber Soul”… it’s that sonically rich. The candid, appealing title track is both sad and funny. Her melancholy but soothing “Negative Self Talk” arrives at a surprise conclusion.
“Parachute” is sure to be a fan-favorite at concerts, and I can’t wait to hear it live.Turn it up!
CD’s are sold out or on back order everywhere, but you can find it on her website. The album is up for a Grammy in the Best Alternative Music category.
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Veronica, host of Subculture (Wednesdays from 7-8 PM)

“House of Dead Memories” – Sugar: Peak Sugar: big melodies, emotional gravity, and absolutely no wasted motion. Yes, the Hüsker Dü DNA is there—but this is a more focused, song-forward evolution, not a callback. Where Hüsker Dü burned fast, Sugar aimed. This track captures early-90s alternative at its smartest and most emotionally fluent. Loud enough to matter, sharp enough to last. Subculture-approved for a reason.

This isn’t a nostalgia lap—it’s a band that understands exactly who they are. Time has added perspective, not softness. Smart, lean, and slightly impatient in the best post-punk tradition. Proof that new wave was never a trend—it was a framework. Subculture-approved, without hesitation.










FKA Twigs – Eusexua: Charli XCX went to the club on Brat and found herself. FKA Twigs went to the club on Eusexua and left her physical form entirely. Eusexua started the year off with a bang that no other pop record this year could match, an explosion of noise and emotion that used the sound of techno as a gateway to explore the contradictory experiences of community and isolation in the club. The world of Eusexua starts and ends at the threshold of the dancefloor, but Twigs doesn’t find that limiting. Instead, the bounds of the club become a launchpad to soar. That dynamic is established by the hook of the second track, when Twigs tells us “when a girl feels good, it makes the world go round.” Emotion — immediate, urgent emotion — is the driving force of Twigs’ world. Even though dance is a physical act, and this is undoubtedly a dance record, there is a point where body and mind fuse, where the hypnosis of music and movement morphs dancers into new creatures entirely, creatures whose emotions are released through twirls and steps and whose movement seems to pass through more than just three dimensions. That is the point at which Eusexua lives. At its best, techno rewires your ears and synchronizes its frequencies with yours, dissolving the boundaries between body and mind and bringing you directly to that place. Unlike some pop stars who take a club turn, Twigs clearly understands techno’s sultry, hypnotic draw, and she wields it like a natural. Her producer-collaborators Koreless and Sasha step up to her challenge as well, delivering a collection of instrumentals that are at times grungy and industrial (as on “Drums of Death”), at times hypnotic and heady (“Girl Feels Good”), and at times expansive and entrancing (as on the transcendent title track). All together, Eusexua is an instant classic of dance pop. Twigs and her collaborators have created a monument to the promise of club music, a manifesto of personal and collective transcendence. Even more impressively, Eusexua is an accessible and engaging pop record without sacrificing its underground bona fides.

Jens Lenkman – Songs for Other People’s Weddings: As you can probably tell from the tracklists of my show (The Warehouse Continuum, Thursdays at 9, tune in why don’t ya), I am not a lyrics guy. I listen to music sound, for texture, for structure, and every now and then I might catch a word or two along the way. That’s why I was so surprised to find myself not just following along but deeply charmed by Jens Lenkman’s new record, an album-length narrative pulled from his real-life experiences as a wedding singer. Everything about Songs From Other People’s Weddings is a delight. Lenkman’s cheeky, off-kilter songs are subtly weird in a way that keeps the listener guessing yet somehow fit perfectly together, a lyrical jigsaw puzzle of imperfect love and human connection. Every time I listen I can’t help but grin.

Jorg Kuning – Elvers Pass: On Elvers Pass, Jorg Kuning answers the question on everyone’s lips: what if techno were made by toads? Kuning wrangles his modular synthesizers into wobbly, morphing textures that dance over skipping house and electro beats like ferrofluid and encourage the listener to do the same. It’s been a good year for techno that lives in the grey area between mechanical and organic (see also: releases by Facta and K-Lone, DjRUM, OK EG, Priori), but Elvers Pass is the gloopiest and the most playful of the lot. Recommended to anyone who likes pond scum, moss, Beatrix Potter, and dancing with their eyebrows raised in surprise.
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Nathan, Host of Cinema Re-Score (Saturdays at 11 AM)

Sinners, dir. Ryan Coogler: Sinners soundtrack combine blues, jazz and Irish folk to create an amazing mix. With fantastic and thought provoking songs like “I Lied To You”, “Magic What We Do”, and a cover of “Rock Road to Dublin”. Sinners is a films stepped in culture as is the soundtrack.

Chainsawman: The Movie: Chainsawman: The Movie sees the return of musician Kenshi Yonezu (who made “Kick Back” the opening for the previous season) starting the movie off with a song called “IRIS OUT” which is a frantic, chaotic and jazzy tune that perfectly captures the movies high energy.
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Brian, Production & PDX Pop Now! Manager
25 Album Picks of 2025
Alien Boy – You Wanna Fade [PDX]
The Beths – Straight Was A Lie
Buddy Wynkoop – Better Than Botox [PDX]
Circa Waves – Death & Love
Dear Boy – Celebrator
Deep Sea Diver – Billboard Heart [SEA]
Femme Cell – Does Anybody Want This Unbreakable Bond? [PDX]
Garbage – Let All That We Imagine Be The Light
Lackadaisy – Get Me Out Of My Head [PDX]
Lady Pills – Renowned in the Roaring Twenties
Mamalarky – Hex Key
Meggie Lennon – Desire Days
Missionary Girls – Bleeding Out [PDX]
Rocket – R Is For Rocket
Roscoe Tripp – Tiny Antelopes [DC]
Ruby Sparks – Iris
Samia – Bloodless
Sloan – Based On The Best Seller
Snocaps – Snocaps
Splitsville – Mobtown [Baltimore]
Superchunk – Songs in the Key of Yikes
Sydney Sprague – Peak Experience
Tom Smith – There Is Nothing In The Dark That Isn’t There In The Light
TOPS – Bury The Key
White Reaper – Only Slightly Empty
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Penelope, Host of Past Future Present (Saturdays from 7-8 PM)

Addison Rae, Addison: I love a good debut album, and this one did not disappoint. Addison is so much fun, ideal for dancing, and offers a lot of nostalgia. A perfect pop album! My personal favorite song is the opening track: New York.
- PRP’s Picks: Best New Releases of 2025! - December 31, 2025
- PRP’s Picks: Best Releases of 2024! - January 19, 2025
- Best New Releases – 09/20! - September 20, 2024



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