Follow all our Best of 2022 coverage (along with previous year-end lists) here.

Experimental Elvis. Surf-rock Kraftwerk. Garage-rock Roger Miller. Stoner White Stripes. Twee Beach Boys. Heavy-metal Townes Van Zandt. Retro-soul Merle Haggard.
There was no shortage of ambition, or wild genre-crossing ideas, among this year’s cover albums. Here are the best of the best.
25. Otu
Fuzzy Tunes
Finnish doom metal outfit Otu stay on theme (“fuzzy”) throughout this covers album without ever getting boring. Each of the tracks is of a metal or hard rock song, but the style of cover varies each time. Album opener “No One Knows,” a Queens of the Stone Age cover, doesn’t stray terribly far from the original, just a bit heavier and fuzzed out. This is followed by a version of the White Stripes’ “Fell in Love with a Girl” that sounds almost like an early Nirvana track; the guitar is tuned low enough to sound like a bass, or else it’s a bass guitar playing the main riff. Track 3, a cover of “Iron Man,” is the first on the album to really sound like a true “doom” cover. It reveals that, while the other styles help keep the album from being too one-note, Otu’s strength is the slow, down-tuned, guttural sound of classic doom metal. “Holy Mountain” and “War Pigs” are strong tracks similarly drenched in towering, droning guitars. It’s a fun way to hear some classic tunes and you’ll get the most bang for your buck on this album with some good headphones or loud speakers. – Mike Misch
24. Various Artists
Todo Muere SBXV
Todo Muere SBXV celebrates 15 years of the industrial, gothic, experimental record label Sacred Bones (that info will help to decipher the “SBXV”). Things get loud, as when a trio of metal acts Thou, Mizmor, and Emma Ruth Rundle road through Zola Jesusâs âNight.â They also get dreamy, as when ambient artist Hilary Woods warbles âIn Heavenâ from Eraserhead (thatâs right, David Lynch is a Sacred Bones artist).
Even if you donât know many of the original songs â and, unless youâre deep in this scene, you probably wonât â the cumulative effect is mesmerizing, moving, and at times a little harrowing. In a good way. – Ray Padgett
23. Jason McNiff
Tonight We Ride
Jason McNiff may not be the best known of names, but this hard-working singer and guitarist has hewn himself quite a place in the annals of that awkwardly-titled genre, UK Americana. McNiff earned a degree in French and Russian, but the lure of his first love proved too strong. He immersed himself in the fingerpicked guitar of folk and blues, in particular the work and style of the late Bert Jansch. McNiff spent his COVID lockdown hunkering down with weekly online gigs, dubbed the âSundownerâ sessions. Exhausting both his own repertoire of songs and those he already loved by others, he had to learn a whole new catalog of material. Tonight We Ride was the logical conclusion: eleven songs encompassing artists McNiff holds the most in reverence. Sure enough, that includes two Jansch songs, alongside The Beatles (âTomorrow Never Knowsâ), Leonard Cohen (âMoving Onâ), and a couple Dylan tunes too. – Seuras Og
22. AWOLNATION
My Echo, My Shadows, My Covers, & Me
The opener clearly reveals this album as also pandemic-born: âhow can we dance when our earth is turning? how do we sleep while our beds are burning?â The genre of this song is closer to that of what you might expect from modern-rock hitmakers AWOLNATION, but thatâs where my predictions of what would happen next faltered. AWOLNATION provides a soundtrack for the full pandemic roller coaster featuring just as much electro pop as their signature rock approach, as well a variety of guest collaborators.
Feeling down? Jump right into âTake A Chance On Me,â where you might find yourself second-guessing, âwait this is the âSailâ group?!?â Need to refresh your workout mix? There is âManiac.â Other mood boosters are âJust a Friendâ or âFlagpole Sitta,â which you might never have expected to appear together in an album setting. Lest you think this is only a tongue-in-cheek album, introspective choices are woven throughout, like âWings of Changeâ and âAlone Again (Naturally)â.Â
If I had to pick a pair of favorites, one fun and one more serious, they would be AWOLNATION putting the MMMBop in âMaterial Girlâ with Taylor Hanson and âEye in the Skyâ with Beck (not a song I was familiar with before, but now a tune I canât get out of my head). – Sara Stoudt
21. Various Artists
Stór agnarögn
If youâre Icelandic, you probably know these songs. Ăsgeir Traustiâs 2012 album DĂœrð Ă dauðaĂŸĂ¶gn was a sensation in his home country, the best selling debut ever in the country (sorry, Björk).
But statistically speaking, you are probably not Icelandic. So you donât know the original versions of these ten songs – and if you do, itâs probably via the John Grant-translated English versions. No matter. Sigur RĂłs became sensations without anyone understanding what they were saying. Ăsgeirâs songs have beautiful melodies, frequently soaring into Bon Iver-channeling falsetto, and they work wonderfully in this collection of his countrymen-and-womenâs covers. Even if you donât understand a single word (I donât!), the music will carry you away. – Ray Padgett
The list continues on the next page…