Our Annual Report concludes with our biggest list — the 200 (!!!) Best Songs of 2023. Make sure to also see our list of the 50 Best Albums of the Year, and check out our complete recap of the best music, film, and TV of 2023 with awards, lists, and interviews all in one place here.
Boy, 2023 sure was a year! A year among years that — OK, now that the casuals have kept scrolling, let’s talk real shit: Let’s talk about the music industry, where Consequence is heading, and why we wanted to write about 200 songs.
By now you know the deal with music media: fewer outlets, fewer jobs for critics, less coverage, and more new music each Friday than any listener can hear in a week. At the same time, readership for reviews has fallen across the industry. If you’ve paid close attention to Consequence in recent years, you’ve probably seen some of our attempts to navigate this uncertain terrain, like the Songs of the Week roundup or the monthly Staff Picks of best albums, which have allowed us to sustainably analyze a lot more new music.
These changes were public, but Consequence has also been evolving behind the scenes. Our senior editors changed a lot over the last three years, and so did our structure. Consequence of Sound became Consequence. We reinvented ourselves to become more collaborative: fewer top-down editorial decisions, more input from a growing team of staff writers and editors. Some readers might recognize their names: Eddie Fu, Abby Jones, Jonah Krueger, Liz Shannon Miller, Sun Noor, Paolo Ragusa, and Mary Siroky. Their passion made a 200-song list possible.
Consequence will continue to grow, but some things never change. Our publisher is still Alex Young, who started the company in his dorm room in 2007. And we still fucking love music. In 2023, as the shape of our staff came into focus, we ramped up our new music coverage for the first time in years. This list is part of that growth — it used to be 50 songs, and now it’s 200. We wish we could write a full article about every single track, and maybe someday the industry will support that. For now, during the biggest abundance of great music in all of human history, we’re so grateful for the opportunity to celebrate our picks for the 200 best songs of 2023.
— Wren Graves
Features Editor
200. M83 — “Amnesia”
Anthony Gonzalez has offered a beyond-worthy successor to Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming’s “Reunion” — “Amnesia” is both dramatic and serene, energizing and spacey. — Paolo Ragusa
199. mazie — “Are You Feeling It Now?”
It’s a groovy, playful disco track about an acid trip that’s sweeter, sexier, and more enjoyable than… most acid trips. — P. Ragusa
198. Veeze — “Not a Drill”
“This not a fire drill, this the real thing,” Veeze raps on the opening of “Not a Drill,” going on to prove the statement with his off-kilter flow and colorful wordplay involving Disney and sports references. — Eddie Fu
197. King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard — “Dragon”
King Gizz go metal once again on this winding prog-thrash epic that sees the band pushing its technical skill to the extreme. — Jon Hadusek
196. Poppy — “Spit”
“Spit” is Poppy at her most vicious and acerbic, with her screams and whispers backed by nu-metal guitars and industrial drum-and-bass percussion. — J. Hadusek
195. Ryan Gosling — “I’m Just Ken”
This Mark Ronson and Andrew Wyatt-written ballad (featuring Slash on guitar!) could singlehandedly cure toxic masculinity, if only the world would listen. — Liz Shannon Miller
194. Teens in Trouble — “You Don’t Want to Mess with Me”
Snap, crackle, and (damn fine, PUP’s Stefan Babcock-featuring power) pop. — Jonah Krueger
193. Hotline TNT — “I Thought You’d Change”
Hotline TNT’s Will Anderson sings pretty well on this track, but he actually doesn’t need to — the fuzzy guitars and inventive drumming do all the storytelling for him. — P. Ragusa
192. Corey Taylor — “Dead Flies”
Corey Taylor slows things down for this grungy nod to Alice in Chains — a darker moment on his otherwise jubilant CMF2 album. — J. Hadusek
191. Computerwife — “Lexapro”
The slow, dreamy, strangely beautiful anthem Lexapro users everywhere have been waiting for. — J. Krueger
190. redveil feat. JPEGMAFIA — “black enuff”
A joyful, daring, and unapologetic anthem that is meant to be blasted as loud as the horns on the beat. — Sun Noor
189. glass beach — “The CIA”
With its indie-emo-jazz-metal fusion, glass beach’s return is extremely glass beach — and thank god for that. — J. Krueger
188. Armani White & Denzel Curry — “GOATED.”
Come for the swaggy beat by July Da Producer and Myles William, enjoy Armani White’s percussive “Goated” hook, and stick around for one of the great scene-stealing guest verses of the year. — W. Graves
187. Stolen Jars — “Won’t Stay Gone Forever”
This delicate love letter to New York City takes a light xx-inspired touch to capture the wistfulness even a bustling city can instill — especially when it’s forced to a standstill. — Ben Kaye
186. Job for a Cowboy — “The Agony Seeping Storm”
Job for a Cowboy broke a nine-year hiatus with “The Agony Seeping Storm,” a perfected version of the progressive death metal of the band’s first four studio albums. — J. Hadusek
185. Queens of the Stone Age — “Paper Machete”
If you liked Queens of the Stone Age’s 2005 hit “Little Sister,” but wished they’d axe the cowbell in favor of more crunchy guitars and some tortured Josh Homme anguish, get a load of this one. — P. Ragusa
184. Willie Nelson, Billy Strings — “California Sober”
From a rising icon and a beloved legend, the ultimate 2023 anthem for former hellraisers who are too old for that shit and just want to kick back with some buds and bud. — W. Graves
183. Momma — “Bang Bang”
There’s nothing like a good, horny love song to make you feel young again — only on “Bang Bang,” Momma’s early 2000s-esque rock stylings will make you feel old at the same time (in a good way). — P. Ragusa
182. André 300 — “I Swear I Really Wanted to Make a Rap Album But This Is Literally the Way the Wind Blew Me”
If you listen closely halfway through, the flute kind of mimics a rap song, so at least the title feels honest. — S. Noor
181. Friko — “Crimson to Chrome”
The Chicago rock trio are having unpretentious fun singing about deep shit, making “Crimson to Chrome” perfect for pretty much any occasion. — W. Graves
180. 100 gecs — “Dumbest Girl Alive”
The damn song starts with the THX sound — an early signal that the fun levels are maxed out. — J. Krueger
179. Dirty Honey — “Won’t Take Me Alive”
A killer, killer guitar riff is at the heart of this surging ‘80s-style rocker from Dirty Honey, who are quickly becoming a mainstay on the US hard-rock circuit after emerging in recent years. — J. Hadusek
178. NxWorries — “Daydreaming”
The breezy “Daydreaming” is NxWorries at their best, with a smooth vocal delivery and seductive lyrics from Anderson .Paak over Knxwledge’s sensual, guitar-driven instrumental. — E. Fu