The past year has wreaked havoc on the music industry, with live music dramatically curtailed, crew workers struggling to make ends meet, and recording studios looking for ways to operate safely. Despite these serious challenges, we’ve got plenty of great music to look forward to as the new year gets underway — from some of music’s biggest names returning to their thrones to rising stars making new breakthroughs. Some of these albums have confirmed dates and details, others are just highly intriguing prospects on the horizon, and they’re all reasons to be excited about the months to come. Here are 54 of the pop, hip-hop, rock, country, and more LPs we’re hoping to hear in 2021.
Drake

Album: Certified Lover Boy
Release Date: TBA
A global pandemic does not suit an artist like Drake, who thrives on a steady stream of attention from the world. He was uncharacteristically quiet in 2020, save for “Toosie Slide,” from the lukewarm Dark Lane Demo Tapes. His follow-up to 2018’s Scorpion, which bears the quintessentially Drake title Certified Lover Boy, was announced via a sleek and mysterious album trailer, in which we see Drake’s impressive run of albums flash before our eyes via live-action cover re-enactments. What could it possibly mean? Here’s to hoping Drake sets off 2021 right.
Foo Fighters

Album: Medicine at Midnight
Release Date: February 5th
Dave Grohl & Co. have spent their past few album cycles seeking adventure: making HBO docs, buying famous recording consoles, hanging with Justin Timberlake. But for their 10th album, Medicine at Midnight, they put on blinders. It’s simply the six Foos discovering their pop side with help from songwriter-producer extraordinaire Greg Kurstin (Adele, Kelly Clarkson). They explore dusky acoustic funk on “Shame Shame” and gild the rockier protest song “No Son of Mine” with daring, hummable hooks. “Our love of rock bands that make these upbeat, up-tempo, almost danceable records inspired us to make the album that we did,” Grohl recently told Kerrang. “We surprised ourselves.”
Lorde

Album: TBA
Release Date: TBA
Lorde is set to release a book of photos this year from her travels to Antarctica, titled Going South, and she’s hinted that the February 2019 trip also helped inspire new music: “Antarctica really acted as this great white palette cleanser, a sort of celestial foyer I had to move through in order to start making the next thing,” she wrote in a recent message to fans. She tends to take her time between projects — her widely acclaimed Melodrama came four years after her star-making debut, Pure Heroine — and we can’t wait to hear what she’s been working on this time. “The work is so fucking good, my friend,” she wrote in another post, where she revealed that she’d begun sessions with Melodrama producer Jack Antonoff prior to the global lockdown. “I am truly jazzed for you to hear it.”
Cardi B

Album: TBA
Release Date: TBA
Cardi B kept her foot firmly on the gas for the entirety of 2020. There was the earth-rattling “WAP,” which became a cultural touchstone in a year bereft of cultural touchstones. There was also Cardi’s increasing presence as a social commentator; her conversations with presidential candidates offered more insight than plenty of cable-news hosts. Her follow-up to 2018’s Invasion of Privacy is on the way, according to Cardi herself, who tweeted last year about new music, saying, “Its going to hit too!!!”
Billie Eilish

Album: TBA
Release Date: TBA
Judging from “Therefore I Am,” the single Billie Eilish released late last year, the neon-haired 19-year-old will carry the gloriously introverted pop sound of 2019’s When We Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? on to her as-yet-untitled second LP. Like on her megahit “Bad Guy,” she whispers sweet invective at all the people who have ever doubted her over a punchy beat by her brother Finneas, sounding confident and self-assured the whole time. As of a December interview with Vanity Fair, the pair were crafting 16 songs for the LP. “We’ve been working and I love all of them,” Eilish said.