Rewriting The Pop Archetype: The Music's Best Albums Of 2019

24 December 2019 | 1:14 pm | Lauren Baxter

Yet again, we polled 'The Music' team and contributors to pick out the best of the year 2019. The Album Of The Year picks saw a changing of the guard, with the list dominated by women in pop.

At the end of a decade where she constantly had to battle detractors questioning her authenticity, Lana Del Rey takes out The Music’s Album Of The Year. Armchair critics still loudly reject those they consider an "overnight success”, especially women. Just look at local sensation Tones & I – her fast ascension in 2019 has led to relentless online bullying. Del Rey suffered the same throughout the ‘10s, fielding claim after claim she was a manufactured, major label puppet. But she remained steadfast and with Norman Fucking Rockwell! released one of 2019’s most assured albums. It’s a trend that permeates through The Music’s top ten albums. Eight out of the ten artists are women, all forging their own path defiantly and opposing old, arbitrary archetypes about what women in music should look like. It’s a far cry from previous years in this category, The Music's poll characteristically dominated by men. 

Released in August by Polydor and Interscope Records, Norman Fucking Rockwell! uses soft-rock and piano-led ballads to rewrite the “great American dream’’: that same dream the artist Norman Rockwell delineated in Freedom From Want. Labelled a “millennial troubadour” and “one of America’s greatest living songwriters” by Pitchfork, Del Rey has crafted an album that stands out in 2019 as a sign of the times. 


It wasn’t without its controversy though. In a review of the album, NPR's music critic and correspondent Ann Powers discussed authenticity and the use of a persona. Del Rey took exception. “Here’s a little sidenote on your piece,” she responded on Twitter. “I don’t relate to one observation you made about the music. There’s nothing uncooked about me. To write about me is nothing like it is to be with me. Never had a persona. Never needed one. Never will.” It opened a discussion about the role of the critic in modern culture. 

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Lizzo – who comes in at #2 with Cuz I Love You – also weighed in on the critics' debate, proclaiming on Twitter that “People who review albums and don’t make music themselves should be unemployed.” She made the comment despite the album’s widespread critical acclaim. Loud, charismatic and shamelessly Lizzo, the album bops and we’ve been blaming it on the juice all year long. Just not quite to the same level of devotion as Frankie Muniz. 


We’d be amiss to talk about women in pop music without acknowledging the years that both Taylor Swift (coming in at #7 with Lover) and Billie Eilish (When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? at #9) have had. They’re two innovators ahead of the game, Swift emblematic of millennial pop culture, Eilish the face of Generation Z. 

Continuing the run of women is Sharon Van Etten’s Remind Me Tomorrow, which pulses with optimism and humour, at #10 and FKA twigs too who delivered an album off the back of a highly publicised break-up. The all-encompassing Magdalene found hope in heartbreak and sees twigs in the #8 spot. 

Elsewhere, David Berman left a lasting impression with Purple Mountains, his new project which arrived ten years after the dissolution of Silver Jews. Tragically, he was found dead in a Brooklyn apartment the next month.

The work of three Australian acts, Sampa The Great, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds and Julia Jacklin, also made their mark in 2019, landing at #3, #4 and #5 respectively. Sampa Tembo is fast becoming one of Australia’s greatest exports: her ARIA-winning album The Return is straight fire and it's exciting to see the world finally catching up. Nick Cave painted vivid landscapes of grief and Bright Horses in the critically adored Ghosteen and Jacklin’s Crushing was just as it said on the tin, catapulting her across the world and even onto the stage with our #1, Lana Del Rey.

The Top Ten

1. Lana Del Rey - Norman Fucking Rockwell!
2. Lizzo - Cuz I Love You 
3. Sampa The Great - The Return
4. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Ghosteen
5. Julia Jacklin - Crushing 
6. Purple Mountains - Purple Mountains
7. Taylor Swift - Lover
8. FKA twigs - Magdalene 
9. Billie Eilish - When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?
10. Sharon Van Etten - Remind Me Tomorrow

Past Winners

2018: Courtney Barnett - Tell Me How You Really Feel
2017: Kendrick Lamar - DAMN.
2016: David Bowie - Blackstar
2015: Tame Impala - Currents
2014: Chet Faker - Built On Glass
2013: Kanye West - Yeezus
2012: Tame Impala - Lonerism
2011: Bon Iver - Bon Iver
2010: Arcade Fire - The Suburbs