The end of the year is approaching fast, and as you have been accustumed to I share with you an end-of-the-year list. Later in December I’ll give you even more: my annual Most-enjoyable-album-list, so watch this space.
To help you endure the run-up to the holiday season, here is, as a bonus, my playlist of not-so-well-known Christmas tracks that I published a few years back.
The whole November-December list is found below.
If you miss tracks from previous blog posts, or just want to have access to the most incredible and never ending playlist, click on Music Hunter – Back Catalogue
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New Albums
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Caught Light – Great Lake Swimmers
Let’s start with a trip to Canada, and to what we should call Canadiana, with folk band Great Lake Swimmers. They have been around for a long time, this is their nineth studio album, I believe, warm and intimate in the 70s indie territory , beautiful and well-crafted melodies and harmonies to go with them.
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El Quinto Cardón – Los Cinco Cardones
Over to Mexico, and an interesting jazz group, Los Cinco Cardones, offering really accessible, funky jazz. Drummer and head of the group is Sebastian Maschat, residing in Austria, and part of the album is thus recorded in Europe, although it has a definite latin feel to it.
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Exits & Entrances – KANE
And while in Europe, let’s travel on to Holland and one of their greatest rock bands, KANE. The boys have split up numerous times, which might explain the album title, but there is a lot of nostalgia in their home country keeping the success going. This is happy rock and swelling ballads, of the sort we used to listen to a lot in the 80s and 90s. Why not continue?
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Fatal Optimist – Madi Diaz
From station rock we turn the volume down considerably. Nashville’s Madi Diaz’ new album Fatal Optimist is the first of many albums in this month’s list dealing with break-up. Some of the tracks are on the depressive side, but I really enjoy some of the intimate tracks where we can hear every crack in Diaz’ sensitive and warm voice.
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LIAR (Love Isn’t a Right) – Tanita Tikaram
I have been an avid fan of Tanita Tikaram since the late 80s when she became an instant star with Twist in My Sobriety and her debut album Ancient Heart. Her young ancient heart has matured further, and I believe LIAR is among the best albums ever from her. The songwriting is impeccable, varied and suitably custumized to her lovely contralto voice. The title track is a cover of a track from Molly Drake‘s catalogue, with such a strong message for our time.
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Lovin’ You – Richard Ashcroft
Verve-vocalist Richard Ashcroft is back, softer and cuddlier than ever before. One should think spending time on the road with the Gallagher brothers of Oasis should toughen him up, but «Lovin’ You» is mostly a gentle album, with lots of mid-tempo songs that suit his voice perfctly. It suits my taste as well.
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Pretty Idea – Amber Mark
Amber Mark is out with her second album, and we are served soft RnB with lots of retro disco elements. The album is slick and with a number of tracks that begs re-listening. The lyrics are personal and saturated with relationship references. Her marketing people are pouring out sexually laden photos of her, which is totally unnecessary – this is an artist that can speak through her music, and do not need to be portrayed as a just another sex symbol.
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Returning to Myself – Brandi Carlile
Brandi Carlile of The Story fame, has been part of many collaborative projects lately, most prominently the album she did with Elton John, but also her Joni Mitchell concerts. Now she is back on her own again, and although the album lacks another The Story, it is still a strong statement of what she is capable of. This is pop and rock with passion.
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So Say All Of Us – Real Ones
Norwegian band Real Ones has been around for decades, and like KANE of Holland, very little have changed since their debut. Thank god for that. This is still an easy blend of folk, pop and a bit of psychedelia, with harmonies and jam‑friendly grooves intact rather than chasing trends. And so say all of us.
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There’s Always More That I Could Say – Sigrid
Sigrid is a Norwegian pop singer‑songwriter who broke out internationally with “Don’t Kill My Vibe”, winning a reputation for hook‑heavy, no‑nonsense Scandi pop, becoming one of Norway’s most visible pop exports in the process. Now she has matured considerably, in mye view. Yes, her music is still hook-heavy, but both her ballads and up-tempo tracks have considerably more depth to them than on her previous two albums. And still thoroughly enjoyable.
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Traces of You – Ivy
Ivy is a New York indie‑pop trio formed in the mid‑1990s by French singer Dominique Durand with Andy Chase and Adam Schlesinger, trying to bring 60s French pop to the U.S. Adam Schlesinger became on of the unfortunate victims of Covid, and tragically died at the age of only 52. The band has tried to continue without him, and have used demos and unfinished recordings with Schlesinger on «Traces of You», making this a very emotional journey for both the band members and their fans. I didnt know any of this when I started listening to the album. It strengthens the listening experience, obviously, but the album is in any context interesting.
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Uh Oh – Patrick Watson
We’re going back to Canada and to Patrick Wilson, singer, pianist and composer whose work sits somewhere between chamber pop and indie rock. Uh Oh is the strangest album on this month’s playlist, with its many duets and almost Disneyesque sound, minimalist while at the same time songs packed in lush arrangements. There is a tragic explanation to this. Years ago Wilson completely lost his voice after a concert, and the doctors told him he would never be able to sing as before. He went into similar therapy as deep-sea divers and managed to reclaim much of his voice, but had to re-learn to use it, and accept the diminished range. By listening to Uh Oh, you wouldn’t think he needed a greater range, though, so it all ended quite well.
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West End Girl – Lily Allen
I have been waiting patiently for a new Lily Allen album, and had almost given up when West End Girl suddenly was released. And what a come-back! Critics have been almost unanimously enthusiastic, calling it one of the year’s standout pop albums and her sharpest, most focused writing in over a decade – “acid‑tongued and soft‑hearted” again, as one blogger put it. She is dealing with the infidelity and ultimate break-up of her relationship with actor David Harbour. There is more vulnerabilty and confusion and sorrow than acid in my view, but her sarcasm is never far away. But the most impressive with this album is that the songs are among the best she has ever written and produced, and West End Girl is rightly considered among the best albums of 2025. Just how good I’ll tell you closer to Christmas.
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I only have four new singles for you this time. It is not single season for obvious reasons; artists are pushing albums out for the autumn and end-of-year sale. Lisa O’Neill’s The Wind Does’nt Blow This Far Right is perhaps the most interesting, a song about man-made disasters driven by greed, fear, and lies, rather than natural ones. It is a reaction to the «unsettled times» the world is experiencing, according to O’Neill. She began writing the song in November 2017 and finished it in January 2025, a hymn for our time.



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Getz/Gilberto – Stan Getz & João Gilberto
This album was one of the first albums that got me interested in jazz and particularly latin jazz. I met Stan Getz when I was a young freelance journalist, and he gave me such a hard time because it became instantly apparent that I just didn’t know much about his music and career. I made amends after that, and have followed up on my promise to him to listen to jazz and latin. As far as I know this is one of the most sold jazz albums of all time, and with good reason. Everyone knows The Girl from Ipanema, thanks in great part to the lovely vocal from João Gilberto’s wife Astrud. She was, however, not paid much for her performance, while Getz and Gilberto became rich and famous.
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Look at Us – Sonny & Cher
It was commonplace in 1965 to fill albums with both covers and original material. Look at Us is no exception. But it was Sonny Bono’s own song, «I Got You Babe» that have survived as the classic from the album, greatly helped by the hit movie Groundhog Day that featured the song as a vital part of the plot. Cher was only 16 when she met Sonny, who was married at the time. Their at times toxic marriage has gotten a lot of attention, but when Sonny died in a skiing accident in 1998, Cher released her hit album «Believe» and dedicated it to him.







































































































































































































































