Warp & Weft, Laura Veirs’s most expansive release yet, combines resonant melodies with atmospheric anxiety.
Tense and gothic, The Civil Wars plays out the eponymous duo’s dysfunction with gorgeous aplomb.
Its adventurous scope serves to further expand the mythos behind the band’s ego-fueled, drug-addled, socio-religious musical experiment.
The singer-songwriter talks about his new album, Brandi Carlile, Post-it notes, and pissing on compost piles.
The Weight of Your Love signals a self-conscious change of direction for Editors.
For an album about “fun under the summer sun,” You’re Always on My Mind is singularly joyless.
Aoife O’Donovan’s Fossils finds the singer stepping away from the progressive bluegrass sensibility of her band Crooked Still.