And just like that, 2022 is almost done — but not before we get another round of must-hear albums. December’s slate of releases is set to send the year out on a high note, with something for all tastes.
This month heralds much-anticipated returns from R&B innovator SZA, with S.O.S., and rap super-producer Metro Boomin, with the mysterious HEROES & VILLAINS. December’s riches also include Bad MFs from West Coast hip-hop supergroup Mount Westmore, indie-rock lifers Weezer dropping SZNZ: Winter and a loaded, possibly final album from punk-rock misfits NOFX. There’s also new-generation R&B (RINI’s Ultraviolet EP and Jacquees’ Sincerely For You), dark techno (Terence Fixmer’s Shifting Signals), soul-baring indie (Sophie Jamieson’s Choosing), and much more.
Below, check out a guide to the 15 essential albums dropping just in time for the festive season. — Jack Tregoning
Contributed reporting by Ashlee Mitchell
SZA – S.O.S.
Release date: TBD
Five years after her GRAMMY-nominated debut album, Ctrl, it’s about to be SZA season all over again. While details are still pending, the alternative R&B star is expected to drop her second album, S.O.S., this month, following the single “Shirt” and its teaser follow-up, “PSA”.
In a revealing Billboard cover story, SZA spoke frankly about the pressure she feels to release the album while navigating the music industry and her fans’ expectations. As always with SZA, the music itself speaks volumes, and the darkly seductive “Shirt” (accompanied by a music video co-starring SZA and Academy Award nominee LaKeith Stanfield in a riff on Bonnie and Clyde) suggests S.O.S. will be something to savor. — J.T.
Related: Ari Lennox’s Age/Sex/Location Explores Online Dating, Never Settling & Old School Romance
Metro Boomin – HEROES & VILLAINS
Release date: December 2
To prepare fans for his new album, HEROES & VILLAINS, sought-after rap producer Metro Boomin went all-out on a short film starring his collaborators Young Thug and Gunna alongside celebrated actors Morgan Freeman and LaKeith Stanfield. Following that flex, the artist’s first solo LP in four years is set to feature a who’s who of rap, with an exact tracklist still to be announced.
Metro Boomin’s previous album, 2018’s Not All Heroes Wear Capes, featured the likes of Travis Scott, 21 Savage and Gucci Mane rapping over the producer’s dark, trap-centric beats. This time around, he’s keeping his cards close to his chest, slyly sharing a video of the studio sessions on his Instagram with the caption, “When the sequel is even better than the first.” All will be revealed on Dec. 2. — J.T.
Related: For The Record: Kendrick Lamar’s ‘Good Kid, M.A.A.d City’ Launched A New Era In Storytelling & West Coast Rap
Neil Young – Harvest (50th Anniversary Edition)
Release date: December 2
This year marks the 50th anniversary of Neil Young‘s seminal folk-rock album Harvest, released to great acclaim in 1972. Featuring indelible songs like “Heart of Gold,” “Old Man” and “The Needle and The Damage Done,” Harvest was the best-selling album of that year in the US.
To celebrate the milestone, Young is releasing a special anniversary edition, available in either CD or vinyl box-set. Extras include a new two-hour documentary called Harvest Time, an official release of Young’s BBC In Concert performance , and a hardcover book featuring never-before-seen photos and notes by legendary rock photographer Joel Bernstein. Consider this the festive gift for the Neil Young completist in your life. — J.T.
After breaking out with his 2021 debut album, Constellations, RINI returns this month with the seven-track EP, Ultraviolet. The Filipino-Australian R&B talent, who now calls Los Angeles home, pairs his indelible voice with slinky, late-night production that pulls the listener close.
Ahead of Ultraviolet, RINI has released the singles “Haunt Me” and “Selfish,” featuring GRAMMY-winning rapper BEAM, which pair his themes of love and longing with gauzy, head-nodding beats. “I want to be able to show the world and myself that I’m growing, not just in music, but as a person,” RINI told Uproxx in May. On Ultraviolet, which also features the slick bedroom jams “Something to Feel” and “Your Eyes,” that evolution is evident. — J.T.
Related: R&B Isn’t Dead: Listen To 51 Songs By Summer Walker, Josh Levi & More Artists Who Are Pushing The Genre Forward
NOFX – Double Album
Release date: December 2
SoCal punk veterans NOFX have always kept up a prolific output, and this month the band returns with their 15th LP, Double Album. Following last year’s Single Album, the conveniently titled Double Album features 10 new songs with perfectly NOFX titles like “Punk Rock Cliché” and “Is It Too Soon if Time Is Relative?” Lead single “Darby Crashing Your Party” showcases the band at their hard-riffing, rowdy best, with frontman Fat Mike clearly relishing lyrical volleys like, “A middle-class clown waging lower class war/A Beverly Hillbilly peeled off the floor.”
In a statement announcing the new album, Fat Mike revealed the songs were recorded at the same time as Single Album, then finished off later. “I think it’s a very enjoyable album, and maybe our funniest,” he added. It could also be NOFX’s parting gift — responding to a fan’s Instagram comment, Fat Mike announced that 2023 will be the band’s “last year” after an “amazing run.” — J.T.
Related: 5 Women Essential To Punk: Exene Cervenka, Poly Styrene, Alice Bag, Kathleen Hanna & The Linda Lindas
Terence Fixmer – Shifting Signals
Release date: December 2
French producer Terence Fixmer has been one of the most intriguing figures in the electronic music scene for well over a decade. Over six past solo albums, numerous EPs and standalone releases, Fixmer has perfected a dark, gritty sound that melds techno with the looser industrial spirit of electronic body music (EBM).
Fixmer’s seventh album, Shifting Signals, continues in that vein while allowing for new textures to creep in. “On each album I aim for something different but I retain the core sound, which is always there and often dark and melancholic,” the producer wrote in a statement. “Sometimes the balance tips slightly and on this album, I’m striving to be freer and open myself up more to melody.”
That openness to different modes is showcased on the atmospheric, piano-led “Synthetic Minds,” which evokes a John Carpenter film score, while fellow singles “Corne de Brume” and “No Latitude for Errors” are built for heady techno dance floors. — J.T.
Related: Going Underground: House DJ Claude VonStroke On Making Soul Decisions & Keeping Electronic Music Grimy
Sophie Jamieson – Choosing
Release date: December 2
On her debut album, Choosing, London-based singer-songwriter Sophie Jamieson doesn’t shy from difficult or uncomfortable emotions. Lead single, “Sink” lays bare her push-pull relationship with alcohol over a lulling bed of piano and drums. That theme of emotional vulnerability carries through the LP’s 11 songs, which foreground Jamieson’s enchanting voice and plain-spoken lyrics.
“The title of this album is so important,” Jamieson wrote in a statement. “Without it, this might sound like another record about self-destruction and pain, but at heart, it’s about hope, and finding strength. It’s about finding the light at the end of the tunnel and crawling towards it.” Choosing arrives via Bella Union, the tastemaking label led by Simon Raymonde, formerly of Scottish dream pop band Cocteau Twins. — J.T.
Related: Hear The 2022 Nominees For Best Alternative Music Performance At The 2023 GRAMMY Awards
White Lung – Premonition
Release date: December 2
Canadian punk rockers White Lung weren’t expecting to take six years to follow up 2016’s celebrated Paradise. As the story goes, the band got together in their hometown of Vancouver in 2017, expecting to rip out their final album before parting ways. In the studio, frontwoman Mish Barber-Way discovered she was pregnant with her first child — which, along with a global pandemic and another child, put the album plans on ice.
Fast forward to 2022, and White Lung’s fifth and final album, Premonition, is finally here. With all that extra time to marinate, Premonition is a thrilling return from the trio, mining deeper themes with the same raucous, kick-down-the-door energy that fans expect. The album opens furiously with “Hysteric”, and also features the singles “Date Night” and “Tomorrow,” which match Barber-Way’s impassioned vocals with muscular punk-rock riffing.
“We felt like this record was the right endpoint and we are happy the songs will finally be released,” the band wrote in a statement. — J.T.
Related: Like Turnstile And Code Orange? 10 More Bands Expanding The Boundaries Of Hardcore
A Boogie Wit da Hoodie – Me vs. Myself
Release date: December 9
New York’s A Boogie wit da Hoodie has been steadily hyping the release of his fourth album, Me Vs Myself, throughout 2022. Originally scheduled for November, the album will drop this month, right in time for A Boogie’s hometown album launch at the iconic Apollo Theater in Harlem.
Me Vs Myself was preceded by a pair of singles, “Take Shots,” featuring Tory Lanez, and “Ballin,” which both showcase the rapper’s supremely confident flow and wavy beats. While the full tracklist is not yet confirmed, A Boogie’s previous album, ARTIST 2.0, covered the R&B and rap spectrum with guests like Summer Walker, Khalid, Young Thug and Lil Uzi Vert, without pulling focus from the main star. The rapper has already lined up dates for the Me Vs Myself tour stretching into 2023, so it’s a great time to bet on A Boogie. — J.T.
Related: Meet The 2022 Nominees For Best Rap Album At The 2023 GRAMMY Awards
Mount Westmore – Snoop, Cube, 40, $hort
Release date: December 9
When living legends Snoop Dogg, E-40, Too Short and Ice Cube formed the supergroup Mount Westmore, West Coast rap heads took notice. After several hints that a collaborative album was coming, Mount Westmore made the surprise decision to release their debut, Bad MFs, exclusively as an NFT via the blockchain-based platform Gala Music.
The album arrives on streaming services this month under a new title, Snoop, Cube, 40, $hort, featuring additional songs not included on the NFT version. A spirit of loose fun and ride-or-die friendship carries through all the singles released so far, including the swaggering “Bad MFs” and the bass-heavy, light-hearted “Big Subwoofer.” As Snoop put it to HotNewHipHop, “You bring the legends of the West Coast together, something great will always happen.” — J.T.
Related: Take The Power Back: How Rage Against The Machine’s Debut LP Created Rap-Rock With A Message
Leland Whitty – Anyhow
Release date: December 9
Best known as a member of Toronto-based jazz ensemble BADBADNOTGOOD, Leland Whitty is a true multi-instrumentalist. On his seven-track solo release, Anyhow, Whitty oversaw all production and composition, moving deftly between guitar, synthesizer, woodwinds and strings.
Following his scores for indie films Disappearance at Clifton Hill and Learn to Swim, Whitty was inspired to combine cinematic composition with rock and jazz instrumentation in his own project. Lead single “Awake” perfectly strikes that balance with twinkling keys, mournful strings and an insistent drum beat, while follow-up “Glass Moon” conjures a similarly beguiling mood. Members of BADBADNOTGOOD and Whitty’s musician brother also joined the studio sessions, making Anyhow a family affair. — J.T.
Related: Robert Glasper & Terrace Martin On Removing Their Egos And Creating Their GRAMMY-Nominated Collaboration Dinner Party: Dessert
Jacquees – Sincerely For You
Release date: December 16
On “Say Yea”, the sultry bedroom anthem he dropped back in May, Jacquees croons, “Girl, you overdue for some romantic s—.” That simple line is something of a mission statement for the R&B casanova, whose third album, Sincerely For You, drops this month.
The LP features “Say Yea” alongside 16 more R&B jams, including singles “Tipsy,” which captures the singer’s blurry plea to a lover, and the smoothly boastful “Still That.” Elsewhere, Sincerely For You offers up guest turns from Future (who also executive produced the album), 21 Savage and Tory Lanez, plus the R&B dream team of 6lack and Summer Walker on “Tell Me It’s Over.” On his socials, Jacquees dedicated the album to “everybody who been there for me along the way” and promised to deliver only “real R&B.” — J.T.
Related: Durand Bernarr’s ‘Wanderlust’: The R&B Singer Explains Why He’s “Constantly In A State Of Arriving”
Ab-Soul – Herbert
Release date: December 16
Six hard-won years after his last album, the divisive, conspiracy theory-heavy Do What Thou Wilt., Ab-Soul has found his drive again. The rapper from Carson, California returns this month with a deeply personal album that shares his birth name, Herbert.
Ab-Soul’s new outlook was previewed in lead single “Do Better,” which reckons with the scars of his past and looks to the future with powerful clarity. The next single, “Gang’Nem,” featuring Houston rapper FRE$H and produced by fellow Top Dawg Entertainment mainstay Sounwave, also revisits his upbringing and pays respect to L.A. street culture over a woozy, hard-hitting beat.
For fans of Ab-Soul’s dense lyrical style and gravelly flow, Herbert is an eagerly-anticipated return to the rap limelight. — J.T.
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NCT DREAM – Candy
Release date: December 19
NCT Dream, the youngest sub-group of Neo Culture Technology (NCT), has seen exponential growth since they rebranded as a fixed unit in 2020. The septet is set to release a winter special EP called Candy on Dec. 19. The mini-album’s six tracks, include lead single “Candy,” which was originally performed by H.O.T. in 1996. The album will be the first holiday release for any NCT sub-group, following a slew of successful releases from NCT Dream this year.
The group released their second studio album, Glitch, in March 2022, followed by their repackaged Beatbox in May. Their first feature film, NCT Dream The Movie: In a Dream, released worldwide on Nov. 30 and Dec. 3 and documents the opening days of their tour in Seoul. The group will finish their tour in Japan by February 2023. — Ashlee Mitchell
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Weezer – SZNZ: Winter
Release date: December 21
This has been a remarkably good year to be a Weezer fan. Always pleasingly prolific, in 2022 the band decided to release a four-EP series under the name SZNZ, each timed to coincide with a new season.
Following Spring, Summer and Autumn editions, SZNZ: Winter arrives just in time for peak coziness. While the complete tracklist is not yet known, Weezer performed the EP in full for an intimate crowd at the Troubadour in Los Angeles (using their favored alias Goat Punishment), with new highlights including “I Want A Dog” and “The One That Got Away.”
While frontman Rivers Cuomo has described SZNZ: Winter as having a sad vibe that suits snowed-in days, you can always count on Weezer to cut the melancholy with some power-pop verve. — J.T.
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