- We rounded up the best female-fronted albums that 2020 has had to offer, so far.
- Women have released much of the year’s most essential new music, from Selena Gomez’s “Rare” to The Chicks’ “Gaslighter.”
- Some of our favorite albums on this list include Dua Lipa’s “Future Nostalgia,” Fiona Apple’s “Fetch the Bolt Cutters,” Rina Sawayama’s “Sawayama,” Chloe x Halle’s “Ungodly Hour,” and Taylor Swift’s “Folklore.”
- All 20 of our picks are listed below in chronological order.
- Visit Insider’s homepage for more stories.
Despite significant setbacks for the music industry caused by the pandemic, 2020 has heralded some phenomenal albums so far – and female artists have dominated the first eight months of the year.
From Selena Gomez’s “Rare,” the best album of her career so far, to Lady Gaga’s triumphant return to pop with “Chromatica,” women have released much of the year’s most essential new music.
We rounded up the 20 best female-fronted albums that 2020 has had to offer, so far. They’re listed below in chronological order.
With “Rare,” Selena Gomez faces heartbreak, confronts depression, and emerges triumphant.
“Rare” is easily Gomez’s best album yet. In the words of Rolling Stone’s Brittany Spanos: “bops about depression – we love that for her.”
Gomez managed to stare down heartbreak, confront her struggles with mental illness, and emerge with a defiantly danceable, glimmering ode to self-possession. It's so refreshing to hear the 27-year-old pop veteran find her groove.
"Rare" harnesses her whispery singing style more effectively than ever, and finds potency in quiet declarations of strength - like trying to find someone supportive and reliable even in the boring moments, burning toast and getting predictable.
Gomez proves that she doesn't need flashy hooks or loud vocal runs to prove her power. "Ring" is a bad b---- anthem that's winking and groovy, for example, rather than obviously tailored to please Spotify's playlist algorithm. The best song on the album, "Vulnerable," pulses and glows. Later, 6lack and Kid Cudi lend some unexpectedly welcome gravity to Gomez's sharp R&B instincts.
This album seems to insist: May we never again mistake quietness for weakness. Gomez is poised, flaunting her newfound contentedness with as much grace as humanly possible.
Halsey's "Manic" is an eclectic, immersive, and breathtaking experience.
Halsey's songwriting is as piercing and inventive as ever on her third studio album, which is arguably her best yet.
Although "Badlands" will always hold a special place in the hearts of Halsey's fans, she does far more interesting and adventurous work with the eclectic tracklist of "Manic," taking listeners on a genuinely immersive journey through her own psyche.
From the confessional, dark-pop opener "Ashley" to the astonishingly intimate "929," Halsey never lets up. She dabbles in countrified heartbreak with "You Should Be Sad," lets her heart burst open on "I Hate Everybody," yells at her friends on "3am," and gets soft and tender with "Finally // Beautiful Stranger." For 47 minutes straight, she's at her best, her worst, her most vulnerable, her most honest, and inarguably her most powerful.
"Manic" was also included on our gender-inclusive list of the year's 13 best albums so far.
Kesha returns to her carefree pop roots with "High Road."
In 2009, the world fell in love with a glitter-fueled, swaggering girl who compared herself to P. Diddy. Eleven years later, Kesha's stubborn optimism feels more earned, more essential, and more transcendent than ever.
"Tonight's the best night of our lives," Kesha's familiar, metallic, anti-gravity voice promises at the top of "High Road," her fourth and newest album. "Can you feel it? I can feel it."
Deservedly, "High Road" is an ecstatic reclamation of pop music and a celebration of every weird little corner of Kesha's brain. You name it, she'll sing about it - sexual kinks, tripping in the desert, getting "f---ed up in my Sunday best," leaving society behind to grow potatoes - and you'll practically be able to hear her grinning while she does.
Read our interview with Kesha about the carefree energy of "High Road."
"Color Theory" proves that Soccer Mommy is well on her way to indie-pop stardom.
As I previously wrote in my roundup of 2020's best albums so far, Soccer Mommy's sophomore album is lustrous and polished, without sounding overly buffed or perfected.
By signing to a bigger label, the indie-pop wunderkind has been able to execute a cohesive vision more intentionally and effectively than before. As noted by the New York Times, the album is "meticulously conceived as a three-movement cycle divided by mood and theme."
But more importantly, she hasn't surrendered the blunt vulnerability that made her music feel so necessary in the first place; throughout "Color Theory," her lyricism is guttural and doggedly fearless.
"Suga" is a small but potent taste of Megan Thee Stallion's power.
"Suga" makes it clear that, despite her breakneck rise to stardom, Megan Thee Stallion is just getting started. Pretty much every second of the EP's nine-song tracklist is animated, unpredictable, and thrilling.
This is 24 minutes straight of pure Megan - whether she's delivering some heady, autotune-gospel vulnerability on "Crying in the Car" or bragging about how she can be classy, bougie, sassy, and nasty all at once on the deservedly popular "Savage," which only got better and more popular when Beyoncé hopped on board.
This is Megan's time, and she's using every moment to explore and flex her musical muscles, effortlessly swerving from Helluva Beats-assisted rage to playful '90s R&B. She's not just the indestructible patron saint of Hot Girl Summer; she's so much more, and if Megan can do this much with a simple sample platter, there's no telling what kind of heights await her.
Dua Lipa's vivid, disco-infused "Future Nostalgia" is an instant pop classic.
It feels impossible that Dua Lipa's album could match expectations after the sheer pop perfection of its lead single, "Don't Start Now."
And yet, "Future Nostalgia" is unrelentingly brilliant. "Cool" is suave, head-bobbing magnificence; "Levitating" is deeply, delightfully addictive; "Pretty Please" has a uniquely throaty, raw kind of power; and the mid-chorus dropoff in "Break My Heart" gets more exhilarating with every listen.
Read our first-listen review of "Future Nostalgia" here.
Waxahatchee's "Saint Cloud" embodies the slow, soft, lilac-colored aura of springtime.
Upon its springtime release, Pitchfork bestowed upon "Saint Cloud" - Katie Crutchfield's fifth solo album as Waxahatchee - the website's rare and coveted title of "best new music."
The album received a high score of 8.7/10, with editor Jeremy D. Larson calling the album "a vivid modern classic of folk and Americana."
"'Saint Cloud' is all lilacs and creek beds, Memphis skylines and Manhattan subways, love and sobriety, the sound of a cherished songwriter thawing out under the sun," Larson writes. "It's a record that suggests maybe if you slow down, life slows down with you, and everything is in bloom."
Fiona Apple's "Fetch the Bolt Cutters" is easily the best album of the year so far.
On Fiona Apple's best and most divinely feral album yet, she presents a dissection of her psyche that feels rare and true. "Fetch the Bolt Cutters" is not the sort of music you can listen to on repeat, because it slices right through you with a vividly sharp sword every single time. The blade never dulls.
As Jenn Pelly wrote for Pitchfork, which gave "Bolt Cutters" an almost-unheard-of perfect score of 10: "No music has ever sounded quite like it... It's not pretty. It's free." Rolling Stone called it "a triumphant statement of self-discovery and solidarity." Various New York Times critics hailed Apple for her "casually wise," "fearless," "artfully unguarded anthology."
Rina Sawayama's self-titled debut is an astonishing blend of early 2000s emo rock and bubblegum pop.
Rina Sawayama's studio debut is the early 2000s revival that so many artists have tried and failed to pull off - whereas "Sawayama" does it so well that it feels like a time machine, only capable of bringing you to the much-romanticized era of Tamagotchi pets, Juicy Couture tracksuits and Evanescence worship.
"XS" is the album's brightest highlight: a flawless blend of Britney Spears at her peak, the pop maximalism of Kim Petras, the glittering allure of Paris Hilton's mansion in "The Bling Ring," the irresistibly shallow "Buddha's Delight" from "Music and Lyrics," and the shrewd, half-sincere anti-materialism of Lorde's "Royals."
If you never thought those flavors could be thrown into a blender together and result in a deliciously pink pop confection, then you haven't listened to enough of Sawayama's music.
"STFU!" has hints of both Rage Against the Machine and corny Y2K nu-metal; "Love Me 4 Me" recalls the pre-voice-note genius of Spears' "Lucky" and throws in some *NSYNC vibes, circa "No Strings Attached," for good measure; "Who's Gonna Save U Now?" is clearly indebted to Christina Aguilera's "Fighter."
Every song on "Sawayama" is like a spiked smoothie, made out of all the things you forgot you love.
"Dawn" is a mature, graceful evolution of mxmtoon's beloved bedroom roots.
Mxmtoon rose to fame with little more than a ukelele and a desire to express herself.
And though she's still just 19 years old, mxmtoon has come a long way from the cheeky self-deprecation of "1-800-DATEME" and the high school-inspired anxiety of her popular single "Prom Dress" - but her keen sense of self, lighthearted humor, and knack for piercingly relatable songwriting have all remained.
Indeed, "Dawn" is just seven songs, but the EP is saturated with wonder and sophisticated optimism.
The opening track, "Fever Dream," is like if your ears could understand the sun streaming through your window on a Saturday morning. "1, 2" is a bright, poppy highlight that feels tailor-made for bedroom dance parties. The EP ends with "Almost Home," a deeply sophisticated, accessible meditation on moving forward while staying grounded.
"With 'Dawn,' I can see myself more in the grand scheme of the music sphere and be like, 'OK, yeah. My sound kind of matches up with a lot of people that I listen to now, and in my own free time,'" the singer-songwriter recently told Insider.
Read our interview with mxmtoon about the mature new direction of "Dawn."
JoJo has finally grown into her voice and soul-infused sound with "Good to Know."
From the very first moment that "Good To Know" takes shape, like an interstellar storm cloud forming in your brain, JoJo says exactly what she means: "Feed me love, sex, and drugs" are the very first words you hear her sing.
"Bring me more, it ain't enough," she continues in her signature pitch-perfect warble. "Tell me I'm pretty, yeah, I need that / Think I'm too sober, where the weed at? / Pay me attention."
The album's entire tracklist is flecked with these shimmering, seductive, almost sinister details. JoJo's mesmeric confessionalism pairs incredibly well with thick, R&B basslines and beats.
Read our interview with JoJo about "Good to Know," which she describes as a "delicious journey" and "a way of holding myself accountable."
Kehlani's "It Was Good Until It Wasn't" is the work of an immensely talented, low-key icon.
There's a joke I saw on Twitter, way back when Cardi B released "Invasion of Privacy" in 2018, that I think about whenever a certain R&B artist appears on my Spotify screen: "The Best Song on Your Album feat. Kehlani."
Kehlani is one of the most talented vocalists and dependably excellent collaborators out there, but she has often deprived her fans of consistent solo releases, leaving us to crave a more cohesive vision of her self and her world.
"It Was Good Until It Wasn't," the long-awaited follow-up to her 2017 debut, gracefully satisfies that very craving. This album is headier, more pared down than her previous projects, but it allows Kehlani to step into an even more intense spotlight.
On this 15-song tracklist, Kehlani exorcises demons, pays homage to lost loves and late friends, contemplates the boundaries of monogamy, and clearly benefits from the complex growth that comes with becoming a parent. She centralizes her own perspective, and that profound intimacy - delivered by her always-inebriating vocals - creates the sort of compelling, brooding, and self-assured statement that she was born to make.
"How I'm Feeling Now" boasts some of Charli XCX's best music to date.
Only Charli XCX could spontaneously throw herself into a two-month creative frenzy and emerge with some of the best songs in her catalog.
Despite its creation and arrival during a global pandemic, "How I'm Feeling Now" isn't overdramatic or defeatist; instead, it's tender and curious, boasting a fresh combination of futuristic production and intimate songwriting. Rather than a pure reflection of this moment in history, the album plays like a rebellion against our worst impulses during a crisis.
Read our first-listen review of "How I'm Feeling Now" here.
Carly Rae Jepsen's "Dedicated Side B" is better than most A-sides.
Fans have been begging for the "Dedicated" B-sides since Carly Rae Jepsen's fourth studio album dropped in 2019 - and, just about one year later, she finally obliged.
True to form, these 12 songs don't sound like B-sides. "Dedicated Side B" sounds like a cohesive, sun-dappled, exultant artistic vision.
From start to finish, Jepsen revels in her feel-good pop dominance and '80s-infused idealism. And though she rarely deviates from her sparkling, tingly, edge-free formula, she doesn't need to. Jepsen simply continues to stack impeccable, immediately likable bops on top of each other, like an everlasting Jenga tower - no biggie. She makes it look easy.
Lady Gaga's "Chromatica" is an electro-pop utopia.
"Chromatica" is the most fun that Lady Gaga has sounded in years. Triumphant singles like "Rain On Me" and "Sour Candy" prove that she's still the queen of the dance floor, while liberation anthems like "Free Woman" and "1000 Doves" are much-needed moments of pop catharsis.
"Chromatica" is a study in the healing properties of '90s house beats, soaring hooks, and multi-colored neon lights. Gaga has earned this electro-pop utopia, and she's rarely sounded more confident and clear-headed.
Read our first-listen review of "Chromatica" here.
"Ungodly Hour" by Chloe x Halle is sophisticated, captivating, and emphatically cool.
As expected, sisters Chloe and Halle Bailey sound divine throughout their new album. And I mean that literally, since I doubt those intricate vocal harmonies are earthbound.
"Ungodly Hour" sounds like an entirely different planet - not that it exists elsewhere, but that it is elsewhere, creating its own third space between reality and surreality. This planet is ruled by two women whose voices could act simultaneously as lullaby and curse.
As Cate Young writes for NPR, "They've graduated from glitter and wings to patent leather and chains. But they are still of the sky - forget angels, they're making gods of themselves."
But if you're expecting a set of minimal ballads or stripped-down R&B croonings, upon which many talented singers rely, then you're underestimating the sheer coolness of Chloe x Halle.
Each song is uniquely weird and striking, boasting off-kilter percussion and sinister undertones. And despite taking clear risks and detours, the overall effect is cohesive; Chloe x Halle traverse newly mature territory with grace and sophistication.
"Ungodly Hour" feels distinctly uncluttered, graciously allowing the planet's new visitors to absorb its culture comfortably, to spend as much time there as we like.
Phoebe Bridgers' sophomore album "Punisher" is an exquisite tapestry of emotions.
Phoebe Bridgers is known for putting poetic words to pain, trauma, stress, and anxiety, allowing emotions to feel both piercing and conquerable. Like, if you can describe the experience accurately, or at least tenderly, then you can hold it in your hands and decide what to do with it.
Much in that way, her second album "Punisher" feels urgent. She seethes on "I Know the End," rolls her eyes on "Moon Song," and stands paralyzed by fear and possibilities on "Graceland Too" - but the current that courses through this tracklist is not defeatist. The whole point is the current itself.
Bridgers builds an altar to the very concept of forward-motion, regardless of what the process looks like. She doesn't care about making it look easy. She just cares about making it.
"Punisher" has quickly become one of the most beloved and lauded indie-rock albums in recent memory. Vulture described it as "a head rush of personal growth, loss, and catharsis," while the New York Times called it "strange and exquisitely moving." Pitchfork bestowed the album with a high score of 8.7/10, lauding Bridgers' songwriting as "candid, multi-dimensional, slyly psychedelic, and full of heart."
"Women in Music Pt. III" is Haim's most interesting, textured, and confident album yet.
Haim has always boasted a cool-girl vibe, but the band's first two albums often lapsed into sameness, creating a listening experience too much like walking through a desert landscape: warm, soft, but uneventful.
But the band's third album, "Women in Music Pt. III," is a thrilling new direction. It's still a summer-night rock record - but this one opens with a chaotic sax riff ("Los Angeles"), shrieks "I get sad!" over a '70s California bass line ("Gasoline"), flirts with horny R&B ("3 AM"), and snarls at music industry misogyny ("Man From the Magazine").
The sisters sound as confident as ever, but they've finally learned to weaponize tension and shades of other genres.
The lyrics, too, are more vivid and expressive than ever. Haim is still in the desert, but they've turned down a new and less familiar route, dotted with cacti and canyons. Now there's intrigue; adventure; texture.
The Chicks' comeback album "Gaslighter" is righteously and deliciously angry.
"Gaslighter" - The Chicks' first album after dropping the sandwiched "Dixie" - marks the beloved country trio's reemergence into the limelight. And the women have more to say than ever before.
"Gaslighter" explores divorce and betrayal with sharpened-knife lyrics, like "I prefer my own company to yours anytime," and "My husband's girlfriend's husband just called me up / How messed up is that?"
But the pain and anger never feels gratuitous or unjustified. Rather, the album doubles as an exploration of sexism, female rage, and abuse of power.
"There's no waking up crying at night here. The breakup tunes are pointed, fueled by expectations of faithfulness the lyrics suggest were not met," Craig Jenkins writes for Vulture.
"But listen close to less harsh gems like 'For Her,' 'Young Man,' and 'Texas Man,' and you come away with the image of a woman who just wants to be treated with respect, both because she deserves it and because little boys and girls growing up right now need to see it."
Taylor Swift's "Folklore" might be the best album of her entire career.
Insider's music team rated Taylor Swift's surprise eighth album a whopping score of 9.7 out of 10.
"I have cultivated an entire identity around being a Taylor Swift fan and I can honestly say, with enough sentimental attachment, 'Folklore' could supersede 'Red' to becoming Swift's magnum opus," Courteney Larocca wrote.
"It's exactly why I love Swift. This is what I've pictured for her since 'Red' was released in 2012, and it almost doesn't feel real that it's out in the world."