There’s one thing you can say about 2025 musically: it was a very good year for R&B. After years of naysayers pronouncing R&B dead or irrelevant, the genre yielded a welcome embarrassment of riches this year that illuminated the genre’s vast, versatile scope — and mainstream appeal.
As Billboard staff writer Kyle Denis noted in his insightful essay “Why Did Everything Finally Seem to Click for R&B on a Mainstream Level in 2025?”: “This year is the direct result of several intersecting scenes that have ridden larger cultural and sociopolitical shifts to usher in a new, rich, diverse era of R&B.” Examples of those “intersecting scenes” range from recent Super Bowl halftime shows featuring R&B/pop stars like The Weeknd, Usher, Rihanna and SZA and viral TikTok revivalist trends sparked by older R&B hits like Miguel’s “Sure Thing,” to the burgeoning international R&B/soul crossover movement led by rising talents such as FLO, kwn, Elmiene and Odeal.
Billboard’s R&B/hip-hop team sorted through a bumper crop of more than 60 R&B album releases – an additional testament to the genre’s robust 2025 output. And the yield came in all flavors from both the major labels and, increasingly, the indie sector: traditional, blues, contemporary, alternative and experimental It was a year marked by major breakthroughs (Leon Thomas, Mariah the Scientist); the return of icons (Mariah Carey, The Weeknd, Mavis Staples) and established stars (Teyana Taylor, Ledisi, Miguel, Estelle, Q Parker and the funkateer himself, Bootsy Collins); promising early-career releases (Alex Isley, JayDon, Mereba, Jenevieve) and attention-grabbing works from genre disruptors (Destin Conrad, Dijon, Durand Bernarr).
Needless to say, this bounty gave way to lively discussions and sometimes tense debates as the team took on the tough task of composing the 20-album list below (in descending order). This year’s honorable mentions go to Fridayy’s Some Days I’m Good, Some Days I’m Not, Mariah Carey’s Here for It All, Mariah the Scientist’s Hearts Sold Separately and Eric Benet’s The Co-Star.

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Various Artists, Sinners (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo As R&B returned to the zeitgeist this year, Sinners reminded audiences of the genre’s roots. Anchored by moving vocal performances from star Miles Caton and Grammy-nominated singer Alice Smith, as well as Raphael Saadiq’s cinematic songwriting and Ludwig Göransson’s stirring arrangements, the Sinners soundtrack honored 1930s Delta blues, Irish folk, gospel and soul with infectious originals and integrous covers. From the soaring “Last Time (I Seen the Sun)” to an ominous take on the 19th-centruy Irish ditty “Rocky Road to Dublin,” the Sinners soundtracked gifted us equal amounts of bangers and history. And that’s not to mention Rod Wave’s generation-bridging title track, which helped Sinners earn five nominations at next year’s Grammys. — KYLE DENIS
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KeiyaA, hooke’s law


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo If you put experimental R&B/hip-hop in a pot and mix it with some garage, electronic and jazz, you get a winning, avant-garde project like KeiyaA’s hooke’s law. After five years of experimenting and cooking up intoxicating fusions in the lab, the Chicago singer-songwriter-producer skillfully sidestepped the proverbial sophomore jinx with this follow-up to her critically acclaimed debut album, Forever, Ya Girl. KeiyaA uses her latest offering as a means to look inward and free herself from the pressures posed by expectations. As she sings on “lateee”: “All we can do is be blessed to conspire another day. — ANGEL DIAZ
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Terrace Martin & Kenyon Dixon, Come as You Are


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo “Don’t hide your story, don’t hide your scars/ Being yourself has got you this far/ So come as you are,” croons Isley-Rose, Kenyon Dixon’s daughter, on the opening track of his and Terrace Martin’s lush Come as You Are LP. That directive to “come as you are” manifests across the album through the soulful duo’s dynamic exploration of their L.A. musical roots. Now nominated for a pair of Grammys, Come as You Are traverses jazz, hip-hop and soul, tapping esteemed collaborators like Rapsody and Robert Glasper along the way. A tribute to authenticity, Martin and Dixon aren’t as interested in making pastiches of their influences as they are with fashioning a progressive R&B future out of those building blocks. — K.D.
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Sailorr, From Florida’s Finest


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo After breaking through with her sassy 2024 single “POOKIE’S REQIUEM,” Sailorrr fleshed out her melodramatic vision for From Florida’s Finest. The Jacksonville native ruminates about her raunchy romantic fantasies, which she neutralizes with cheeky humor. Sailorrr medicates insecurities with sharp self-deprecation, as the 27-year-old spirals into tearing up one second and cracking a smile through her black tar-drenched grills the next (teeth darkening is a sign of beauty in many Southeast Asian cultures). Sailorrr’s airy vocals levitate throughout her moody debut mixtape … but she’s been calloused by dead weight partners, who now make for poetic subject matter. — MICHAEL SAPONARA
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Khamari, To Dry a Tear


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo Khamari quietly delivered one of the year’s most cohesive records with To Dry a Tear. The Boston-born, Los Angeles-based singer-songwriter followed up his 2023 debut with a succinct, 11-track set that pulls from D’Angelo (“Sycamore Tree”) and Jeff Buckley (“Lonely in the Jungle”). With his delicate falsetto adding the perfect amount of drama to his disarmingly honest and introspective lyrics, Khamari rises above the Frank Ocean comparisons to share his most fully realized project yet. “To Dry a Tear [comes] from a narrative perspective because it’s about being present,” he told Billboard. “Instead of wanting more and wishing you were somewhere else, it’s about standing still, acknowledging life and telling those stories.” — K.D.
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Madison McFerrin, SCORPIO


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo What a year Madison McFerrin has had. She delivered an impressive “Tiny Desk Concert” in April. She followed that with an even more impressive sophomore album in June before topping things off with a feature on Tyler, The Creator’s “Don’t You Worry Baby” from his surprise album Don’t Tap the Glass in July. SCORPIO’s soundscape is cinematic, providing a vibrant backdrop for McFerrin’s voice — which is as powerful as it is angelic as the singer-songwriter takes listeners on a 36-minute journey traversing love and heartbreak. Tracks like “Ain’t It Nice,” “Spent,” “blue” and “Over > Forever” are perfect displays of the range she exhibits throughout, setting off the project’s ebbs, flows and certified bops. McFerrin has arrived — and it sounds like she’s here to stay. — A.D.
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Elmiene, Heat the Streets


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo Since his captivating performance on the COLORS music platform in 2023 and his popular Tiny Desk appearance in 2024, Elmiene has been steadily gathering fans and acclaim (including co-signers such as Kehlani) thanks to his elegant, soulful tenor and emotive piano playing. The British-Sudanese singer-songwriter hits his stride with this 12-track mixtape, which opens with the searing heartbreak ballad “Useless (Without You).” Other choice cuts — complemented along the way by spoken-word and instrumental interludes — include the funk-vibed “Damage Control” and the sensual mid-tempo “Miss Hot July.” He even fearlessly covers the Carole King classic “You’ve Got a Friend.” Fusing his unabashed ardor for classic R&B with a contemporary freshness all his own, then coupling that with raw, IRL lyrics, Elmiene possesses an authenticity that knows no bounds. — GAIL MITCHELL
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SZA, SOS Deluxe: Lana


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo SZA dropped off an early Christmas gift for fans last December. Packaged as the deluxe edition of SOS, Lana acts more as a separate entity: another album from the Grammy-winning singer filled with 15 airy tracks. Freeing herself from the chaos and toxicities of SOS, SZA inches closer to homeostasis as she enters her healing era in a starry galaxy of breezy melodies and a mellifluous blend of soul, bossa-nova and ‘90s R&B. SZA is at her best when she’s strikingly candid, and Lana is a direct kill shot. She tidied up the arresting messiness of SOS and made it through to the other side — proving that SZA is playing in a league of her own right now. — M.S.
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Summer Walker, Finally Over It


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo In what might be her biggest swing yet, Summer Walker closed out her Over It trilogy in beautiful fashion. The double-disc features big ballads such as “FMY” and “Allegedly,” plus duets with an estimable cast of established and rising stars: Mariah the Scientist, Bryson Tiller, Chris Brown, Brent Faiyaz, Teddy Swims and SAILORR. There’s also the hit single “Heart of a Woman” as well as additional powerful tracks like “Robbed You” and “Go Girl.” When it comes to mainstream, hip-hop-flavored R&B, Walker is one of the genre’s true standard-bearers. Finally Over It is going to have a slow burn that will heat up into classic status as the years go by. — A.D.
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Leon Thomas, Mutt Deluxe: Heel


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo By the time Mutt Deluxe: Heel arrived, Thomas’ breakthrough moment was already in full gear — thanks to the slow-burning success of the title track from his original 2024 album. This deluxe follow-up reframes the original album through a more reflective and restorative lens. Rather than simply stacking bonus tracks onto a hit project, Thomas uses the project’s 10-song expansion to explore what comes after emotional exposure as well as the healing, clarity and recalibration that follow confession. Reworked versions of key Mutt cuts like “Yes It Is” and “Vibes Don’t Lie” feel sharpened by hindsight, while new collaborations with Big Sean, Kehlani and Chris Brown broaden the album’s emotional and sonic reach without diluting its intimacy. The six-time 2026 Grammy nominee is no longer an artist waiting for his moment, but one confidently shaping it. — CHRISTOPHER CLAXTON
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Drake & PARTYNEXTDOOR, $ome $exy $ongs 4 U


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo It was only a matter of time before Drake and PARTYNEXTDOOR shook the R&B landscape. With a catalog that boasts classics like “Recognize” and “Come and See Me,” the OVO tandem delivered a titillating effort with $ome $exy $ongs 4 U ahead of Valentine’s Day 2025. Whether it’s their valiant heroics on “Spiderman Superman” or insatiable desire for validation on “Somebody Loves Me,” Toronto’s one-two punch etched an indelible soundtrack for hapless romantics. — CARL LAMARRE
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Jane Handcock, It’s Me, Not You


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo Crowned the “First Lady of Death Row Records” by label boss Snoop Dogg, Bay Area native Jane Handcock — also a songwriter who has collaborated with Dr. Dre, Raphael Saadiq, Kelly Rowland and Teddy Riley — delivered an impressive debut album to help christen the reemergence of the gamma.-partnered iconic label. Handcock scored her first Billboard chart entry (No. 29 Adult R&B Airplay) with “Stingy,” a sultry ballad about commitment. Another album gem, the feel-good, funky “Stare at Me” featuring Anderson .Paak, cemented her status as an artist to watch, after reaching No. 2 on the same chart. Between her emotive vocal versatility, candid lyricism and colorful musical palette, Handcock brings more fresh, no-holds-barred vivacity to the R&B scene. — G.M.
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Coco Jones, Why Not More?


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo With the release of her long-awaited debut album, Coco Jones finally steps fully into her well-deserved moment. Released April 25 via High Standardz/Def Jam Recordings, Why Not More? is a bold, genre-blending statement that showcases Jones’ versatility, charisma and emotional honesty. Drawing from gospel, pop and classic R&B influences, the album reflects her evolution as both an artist and a woman unafraid to stretch the genre’s boundaries. In describing the project to Billboard earlier this year, Jones kept it simple with three words: “Authentic. Charismatic. Vulnerable.” That ethos courses throughout the album, ranging from confident declarations to moments of raw self-examination. — C.C.
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Durand Bernarr, BLOOM


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo Romance and sex are long-held tenets of R&B songwriting, but Durand Bernarr wanted to explore love through the lens of friendship on his freewheeling third studio album, Bloom. Inspired by the classic Waiting to Exhale soundtrack, Bloom finds Bernarr honoring Prince’s penchant for winding, ever-evolving instrumental arrangements (“Generous”), enlisting ‘00s R&B icons like T-Pain (“That”) and dropping hard-won nuggets of wisdom (“Impact”) across the sprawling 15-song set. With his melismatic voice hurtling through intricate stacks and hair-raising belts, Bernarr doesn’t just honor friendship on Bloom — he reasserts the sanctity of the voice as its own instrument. — K.D.
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Odeal, The Summer That Saved Me


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo Who said love can’t win in the summer? For Odeal — a 2025 MOBO (Music of Black Origin) Award winner and Billboard’s African Rookie of the Year — the mission was simple: create a bite-sized EP that would soundtrack hot days and long nights. The Summer That Saved Me is a tropical-tinged escape where Afrobeats and R&B reign supreme. He and Leon Thomas are a majestic duo on “Miami,” before Odeal jet-sets on the ethereal “London Summers.” No matter the season or location, if love is in the air then Odeal will be the first to document it. — C.L.
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kwn, With All Due Respect


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo The U.K.’s takeover on the R&B circuit continued in 2025 when kwn (pronounced kay-one) released her debut project, With All Due Respect. Her thrill for bedroom theatrics — laced with flirty intention — is loud and clear. kwn’s commanding presence on “Talk You Through It” (which also features FLO) brings any prospective partner calm, while her and Kehlani’s chemistry on “Worst Behavior” straddles the line of spicy and intense. For a nine-track project, kwn’s savory exploits are definitely worth a sequel — to further underscore why early on, the rising star was named Billboard’s R&B Rookie of the Month in March. As she said then when asked to describe her sound: “I don’t really think I could pinpoint a sound; I just do whatever feels good.” — C.L.
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Dijon, Baby


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo Not only did Dijon collaborate on two major 2025 albums — Justin Bieber’s SWAG and Bon Iver’s Sable, Fable —the singer-songwriter-producer squeezed in his acting debut with a role in arguably one of the year’s best films, One Battle After Another. And in between he found time to record and drop his critically acclaimed second album. Baby is an ode to finally settling down and building a family with the overall sound feeling like it was influenced by Prince and early RZA, given its oft-kilter dustiness. The project comes off like a jam session, in which Dijon let whatever he was feeling at the time pour out. Baby is raw, unfiltered and a breath of fresh air — perfect for a late-night smoke sesh or an early morning house-cleaning circuit while off a hippie speedball. — A.D.
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Kali Uchis, Sincerely


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo On her fifth studio album, Kali Uchis leans into hard-earned autonomy, delivering her most vulnerable and emotionally transparent body of work to date. Carried by insightful lyricism and hazy, dreamlike vocals amid moments of quiet self-reflection, Sincerely glides through silky R&B, glossy pop melodies, jazz-inflected nostalgia and Latin-rooted rhythms with effortless grace. English and Spanish coexist seamlessly throughout the album, reflecting the world that the Colombian-American singer-songwriter inhabits — one she’s helped carve out as the rare Latin artist who thrives across linguistic boundaries without diluting her roots. At the peak of her powers, Uchis proves on Sincerely that growth doesn’t require reinvention — just honesty, confidence and the courage to remain unmistakably yourself. — C.C.
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GIVĒON, BELOVED


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo GIVĒON doesn’t mince words on his sophomore album, BELOVED. His ruminations on love are cold, but painstakingly honest. “Twenties” captures his forlorn view of young romance, while “Mud” exposes him as the perpetual bad guy. Across BELOVED, he embraces the smoke, walks on glass and takes his lumps — heart still full, hope barely intact. “Rather Be” offers a ray of light behind a singer who still yearns for his happily ever after, while “Avalanche” chronicles the emotional freefall that comes with being trapped by the gravity of romance. Inspired by production legends Gamble & Huff, BELOVED is a bold statement on love, heartbreak and the courage to try again. — C.L.
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Destin Conrad, Love on Digital


Image Credit: Courtesy Photo When asked how he would describe the sound of Love on Digital, his excellent debut full-length album, Conrad told Billboard, “It’s R&B through a different lens than what we view it in. Loud. Queer.” And that’s probably the simplest and most effective way to characterize the kaleidoscopic soundscape of Love on Digital, which earned the Vine alum his first Grammy nomination for best progressive R&B album.
Across the 15-track set, Conrad traces the tumultuous journey of navigating queer love and relationships in the digital age. Through that introspective – and strikingly earnest — exploration, he blends his most formative musical influences into a new, endlessly alluring aesthetic. The brassy roots reggae from his own Jamaican roots infiltrate “Mr. E” and “So Nice,” skittering percussion and a sexy house bounce anchor tracks like the Kehlani-assisted “Bad Bitches” and “Jumpin’” and whimsical jazz-inflected arrangements help make for practically seamless sequencing. In between his more left-of-center collaborations with seprentwithfeet (“Soft Side”) and Teezo Touchdown (“The Last Time”), Conrad also proves that he’s more than capable of crafting a bonafide pop smash with “Kissing in Public,” 2025’s song of the summer that got away.
With an expansive approach to R&B that equally values its past and its outcasts, Love on Digital reminds us that the genre can never die — it just takes fearless, forward-thinking artists to invigorate the space with new perspectives. — K.D.
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